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Web Design, Development and SEO in Old Town, County Roscommon

If you are looking for someone to help you with your web design, Ecommerce or search engine optimisation, promotion and marketing based in the Old Town area of County Roscommon then you have come to the right place.

Read on and browse the site for more information. Alternatively you can get in touch right away by using our contact form or give us a call on 0844 357 0201.

Location: Old Town, County Roscommon

Old Town might not be on the doorstep of Edmonds Commerce so you might think it was better to look for a web developer who was based in a more local area such as Derrycanan, Drummullin, Flagford, Loughglinn or Rathconor.

However we believe that this really is not important. Thanks to the power of the Internet along with modern conveniences of phone, email and Internet messaging programs, we can help you just as easily as if we were actually based in the next town along in County Roscommon.

Why not get in touch with us today and you will see that no matter where you are, Edmonds Commerce can help you reach the national and even global market place with ease. Location is really not that important!

Location: Edmonds Commerce

With offices in Guiseley and Baildon, which are towns within Leeds and Bradford we are right in the heart of West Yorkshire. Nearby we have Harrogate, York, Wakefield, Huddersfield and Manchester.

Ecommerce

We offer a fully featured set of Ecommerce services to help you get started, maintain and expand your Ecommerce Business. Please see our Ecommerce section for more information on our Ecommerce services.

Development

Highly skilled in developing PHP and MySQL based web applications we can build bespoke systems for you. Alternatively and more cost effectively, we can help you implement a solution structured around one of the leading open source packages.

Web Design

We are fully competent web designers and can offer you an appealing design based around CSS and the minimum of graphics for maximum site speed without any compromise in quality. Our design ethic is largely utilitarian, aiming not only to impress your visitors with the look, but also the ease of use of the site. Furthermore, we will always stick to strict SEO principles to maximise the number of visitors your site will get.

Marketing

Marketing a web site is one of the most important aspects of your success. We can help you in all aspects of online marketing. However our speciality and the one we feel is the most valuable is in the Search Engine Optimisation or SEO field. An effective SEO effort can bring large numbers of visitors to your site on a daily basis for no set cost. The only cost is in the implementation and maintainence of your SEO package.

News in Old-Town, County-Roscommon

Prince's old uni halls could shut
A halls of residence where Prince Charles stayed as a student could close under plans for a new building.

The new car mystery
As the global financial problems continue, the car industry is suffering badly, with new car sales down 36.8% in November. But how in the current climate could anybody be persuaded to buy a new car?

Safety fears over Christmas tree
Health and safety fears prevent a group of volunteers from putting up a Christmas tree in an Essex town.

UK Kurds fight separate battles
The BBC's Samanthi Dissanayake looks at how the Kurdish community in the UK tries to influence politics in their homeland.

No sympathy for Martin in papers
Thursday's papers show little sympathy for Commons Speaker Michael Martin

'End of era' marked at JCB site
A woman who worked at a site now owned by JCB along with her father and grandfather reflects on the "end of an era".

Poll stakes high in oil-boom Ghana
As Ghana prepares to go to the polls, the BBC's Will Ross finds a hotly contested election battle in a nation anticipating an oil boom.

Jerusalem Diary: Monday 1 December
BBC Middle East correspondent Tim Franks sends the latest edition of his diary from Jerusalem.

Festive 'tatty' tree is replaced
A Christmas tree in a County Durham town centre dubbed the "worst in the country" is to be replaced.

Why the love affair with man-eating plants?
A new television adaptation is being made of The Day of the Triffids, but why are we still prepared to believe in a post-apocalyptic world roamed by flesh-eating semi-sentient plants? And do we have a love affair with fictionalised destruction?

Old-Town News Supplied by the BBC