The State of the Work
Imagine that, within the past few months, you saw us at the corner of 3rd and Vine. You said, or maybe shouted to rise above the din of heavy equipment engaged in condo conversion, “What are you working on these days?” We would have given you an answer that included at least a few, if not all, of the following:
- A new website for the Department of History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania
- Writing and editing for a video game startup
- Information architecture and project management for a browser-based scheduling application
- Ongoing capacity building consulting for a Philadelphia non-profit organization
- An Internet home for writer and author Nathaniel Popkin
- Consulting with a well-known e-commerce site on development of a new content management system
What to make of this? A lack of focus? Short attention span? No. We like interesting challenges and making new friends. And there’s more to come.
Want to be our new friend? Contact us about your next website project.
About
Nanomonkey, LLC is a small consultancy, founded by Michael Prell, that makes websites and provides consulting and expertise to optimize the Web experience through editorial services, design, usability and Web application development. Read more.
Contact
Nanomonkey, LLC
465 W. Ellet Street
Philadelphia, PA 19119
Send a message
Download vCard
Bookmarked
- 10 High-Profit Redesign Priorities
Jakob Nielsen tells you where to put your money. Our favorite quote? “Editors are always worth the cost.” - The Business Value of Web Standards
What's so great about using Web standards? Jeffrey Veen presents an air-tight business case for using Web standards on your next project. - Where Am I?
Help site visitors find their way with these navigation best practices. - Entire Harper's Archive Now Online for Subscribers
Including, in the October 1851 issue of Harper's New Monthly Magazine, The Town-Ho's story from "The Whale," a new work by Herman Melville. - The Friends of City Hall
Nathaniel Popkin offers a few suggestions on what to do about the dead zone in and around Philadelphia’s most important piece of architecture.
