Tourism Council WA Give Thanks To Nutwork Web Design

“Nutwork Web Designs helped successfully re launch our corporate website. The Team at Nutwork Web Designs were not only a pleasure to work with but very progressive with the overall design, feel and layout of the new site. Tourism Council WA is now boasting a new corporate face with rich useful content, striking images and video capabilities. The new Tourism Council WA website will serve our organisation, our members and the Tourism Industry in Australia well for years to come.”

Graham Moss
Chief Executive Officer
Tourism Council WA

West Moore Island Lodge team with Nutwork Web Design

wmiNutwork Web Design have launched West Moore Island’s brand new website based on a the very easy to use Drupal CMS.

A little about West Moore Island:
West Moore Island Lodge is part of Kel Brown’s Westralian Marine Group and was borne out of Kel’s vision and love of this unique and unspoilt environment. Previously operating as a South Sea pearl farm, the low impact development on the island has been transformed into a small and exclusive fishing and eco-tourism facility.
The site incorporates an online booking system, flash banner, photo gallery and of course, a beautiful custom design crafted by our designers. The site is a great example of a professional, and yet still very affordable, beautiful looking site that takes care of business and is a pleasure to use.
As well as producing a brand new website, we also produced a TV series which is available on LocoTV.com.au. As one of Nutwork’s sister companies, LocoTV produced a very high quality and affordable video series of the Island and it’s featured on the home page of the Island’s site as well.
Video has a great impact on your visitors – and engages them right from the start. Check out the website and the Video.

The Value of User Generated Content

Kenneth Corbin from Internet News recently wrote the following article on Internet Entrepreneurs and Social Networking sites like Perth’s very own Loconut:

It seems clear enough that the phenomenon of user-generated content (UGC) on the Internet has built enough momentum that it can no longer be thought of as a fad.

Yet the matter of how to make money from the galaxy of blogs, images and videos that people create and share in online communities is far from resolved.

And it grows all the more urgent to find an answer, as ever-larger mountains of venture capital are poured into start-ups built around the social and self-authoring features now widespread on the Web.

Not surprisingly, hearing entrepreneurs, investors and marketers grope for an answer to “What’s your business model?” many industry watchers are beginning to wonder whether the giddy wellspring of UGC plays is setting up the tech world for another spectacular collapse.

“UGC has prompted an investment gold rush to rival that of the dot-com explosion of the mid-1990s,” said media attorney Jeff Liebenson during a panel discussion here at New York’s Harvard Club, where executives from various corners of the interactive media world debated the issue.

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