Scottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website Development
Scottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website Development
Scottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website DevelopmentScottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website Development
Phoenix Search Marketing SEO Internet Advertising Agency

DataFlurry Motto
Scottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website Development
Scottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website DevelopmentScottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website DevelopmentScottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website Development
Scottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website Development

Phoenix Website Design > Scottsdale Arizona Web Design Firm


Free Marketing SEO Tips Training Blog

We offer services to these categories: Phoenix Website Design | Phoenix Web Design | Web Site Hosting | Data Web Hosting | Phoenix Web Development | Phoenix Ecommerce | Affordable SEO Search Engine Optimization | Cheap Web Hosting | Cheap Domain Names Hosting & Registration | Internet | Phoenix Web Designer | Phoenix Website Designer | Search Engine Placement | Phoenix Web Page Design | Pay Per Click Paid Advertising | Phoenix WebPage Designer | Phoenix Web Design Company | Phoenix Custom Web Design | Phoenix Web Developer | Phoenix Web Site Development | Best Web Site Design | Phoenix Web Design Firm | Phoenix Website Designer | Phoenix Web Page Designer | Phoenix Business Web Site Design | Affordable Web Design | Professional Web Site Design | Phoenix Web Page Design | Phoenix Web Page Development | Phoenix Web Maintenance | Phoenix Web Design Services | Scottsdale Web Design, SEO | Tempe Web Design, SEO | SEO Consultants Experts | Add Submit Site Link URL

Scottsdale Arizona website design

DataFlurry is proud to be a provider of high quality Scottsdale Website Design. Our focus is on building search engine friendly websites with a special elegant design. Focusing hard on designing a Scottsdale website that is easy to navigate and built on a focus of improving website traffic.

DataFlurry's Scottsdale Web Design Services are second to none when it comes to quality. Our prices are affordable and the results are amazing. DataFlurry also creates all websites from scratch. Our custom web design services are built around your needs and your preferences. DataFlurry focuses on Quality work that will spark users interest and help to change your sites visitors in to customers.

Many customers opt for a Scottsdale Ecommerce or Shopping Cart Web Site design. DataFlurry specializes in creating shopping cart solutions that perform excellent in the search engines. Not only on the category level, but even on the individual product level

We recommend that you check out our Website Design portfolio to preview our work.

Scottsdale SEO, Scottsdale search engine optimization

DataFlurry specializes in the deployment of internet marketing services to Scottsdale Arizona residents. Scottsdale is right around the corner from DataFlurry's place of business. We specialize in Scottsdale SEO, also known as Search Engine Optimization.

Marketing services from DataFlurry are internet focused. We recommend you view our affordable search engine optimization page to find out more about our services. DataFlurry offers search engine optimization SEO services to help you gain top rankings for major key terms within the search engines. We also offer paid advertising campaign management for Scottsdale companies that need immediate top rankings under terms. This allows companies to pay for each click (or lead) that comes their way. DataFlurry's professional services create proven results that stand the test of time.

DataFlurry's Scottsdale Search Engine Optimization team focuses on several major tactics when optimizing a web site for the search engines. Our primary focus is updating your web site content to be friendly to the search engines. We initiate a powerful link building and article deployment campaign to get the word out fast about your web site. This also helps to confirm with the search engines that you are a relevant website for your main key terms. We also develop new high quality content to help improve your sites rankings within the naturan (non paid) search engine results.

Don't hesitate to contact DataFlurry Internet Solutions for further information, we are sure that they will be excited to help.

Joel McLaughlin
DataFlurry Phoenix SEO

Offering Scottsdale Web Site Design, Scottsdale SEO, Scottsdale Internet Marketing 

A little History about Scottsdale Arizona

Scottsdale was originally inhabited by Hohokam. From circa 300 BC to 1400 AD, this ancient civilization farmed the area and built some of the most ingenious irrigation canals the world has ever known.[citation needed] The name Hohokam translates as "vanished," as the civilization mysteriously disappeared without a trace.[citation needed]

Before European settlement, Scottsdale was a Pima village known as Vaṣai Svaṣonĭ, meaning "rotting hay."[citation needed] Some Pima remained in their original homes well into the 20th century. For example, until the late 1960s, there was a still-occupied traditional dwelling on the southeast corner of Indian Bend Road and Hayden Road.[original research?] By now, however, all Pima have either moved into modern homes within Scottsdale, primarily residing in South Scottsdale, the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community, or elsewhere.

The Hohokam's legacy is their creation of more than 125 miles (200 km) of canals to provide water for their agricultural needs. The remnants of this ancient irrigation system were adapted and improved upon in 1868 by the first Anglo company to stake a claim in the Valley of the Sun, when Jack Swilling set up the Swilling Irrigation Canal Company. Twenty years later, Scottsdale's future would turn sharply upwards, when a U.S. Army Chaplain, Winfield Scott, paid the paltry sum of $2.50 an acre for a 640 acre stretch of land where the city is now located. Winfield's brother, George Washington Scott, was the first resident of the town that was then known as Orangedale and later changed to Scottsdale in 1894.

In 1937, internationally renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright set up his "winter camp" at the foot of the McDowell Mountains, creating what is now known as Taliesin West. Scottsdale, and the rest of Phoenix, have seen an everlasting influence from Frank Lloyd Wright. Many buildings throughout the region were designed by the famous architect. Today, a Frank Lloyd Wright memorial stands in North Scottsdale and a major street bears his name.

From the 1950s through the 1970s, several large manufacturing companies in the Scottsdale and Tempe areas used the solvent trichloroethylene (TCE) in their manufacturing and operating processes. In 1981, TCE began to show up in two Scottsdale drinking wells, and in 1983, the Indian Bend Wash superfund site was listed on the Environmental Protection Agency's National Priorities List. Physical construction of cleanup systems was completed by 2006, with soil cleanup expected to be completed in five years and groundwater cleanup completed in 30 years.

Real estate development had begun in what is now the Old Town area, and moved south.[citation needed] With Phoenix bordering the west and an Indian reservation bordering the east, the town (which is now the long, narrow, extreme southern portion of Scottsdale) developed its narrow shape, stopped by Tempe in the south, and an enormous privately owned ranch, McCormick Ranch to the north. Indian Bend Wash, a rarely flowing river (completely dry otherwise), bisected the city lengthwise, and the normally dry riverbed carried a significant river of water during what were supposed to be rare periods of heavy rains, so called "99 year floods", flowing into the long dammed up Salt River. As the city was home to mostly lower middle class suburbanites, there was no money for bridges over such a rarely running, normally dry river, so even major roads that crossed it simply ran right down into the river bed and out the other side. It flowed several times in the 60s during a succession of floods that were only supposed to occur every 99 years.

As Indian Bend Wash flowed more and more frequently in the late 1960s, federal tax dollars were allocated to allow the Army Corps of Engineers to cement Indian Bend Wash as a large canal, and build bridges over it, similar to the storm drains of Los Angeles, but using wider canals. Doing so would allow the condemnation and purchase of the houses that had been built in the wash, that the Federal government was required, under the Federal flood insurance laws at the time, to rebuild each time the wash flowed. However, it was believed that grass would channel the water as effectively as a cement canal, and a vote was held to determine whether the city should use the federal money allocated for the cement canal to build a system of parks and golf courses in the bottom of Indian Bend Wash instead of a cement canal. Because it would bisect the long narrow city, this system of parks and golf courses would be within biking range of nearly every child in the city and very near houses and condos in which retirees might want to live.[citation needed]

However, the Army Corps favored the canal as a tried and true approach, the idea of grass to channel flood water in a wash was untried, the grass would have to be watered, and the mud from the now more frequently flowing wash would have to be removed from the parks when it flowed, increasing maintenance costs. Although it would require increased property taxes to maintain that the cement canal would not, and was somewhat controversial at the time, the city voted to install the system of parks and golf courses in the Wash, a move that was seen as bold, by a city that was at that time, not particularly wealthy. The park and golf course system was built in such a way as to minimize damage when the water flowed, placing buildings up high on berms, and leaving the remainder as grass, ponds or streams, relatively immune from water damage. The system worked as a flood control channel, and has been retained as parkland or golf courses ever since. The success of the park and golf course system paid off: because the parks and golf courses followed closely on the heels of the mass production of affordable heat pump air conditioners in the 1950s, Scottsdale quickly became a city to which families and retirees wanted to move. The city, still relatively poor, overspent on the park system, building the El Dorado public pool in a protected berm at one edge of the wash, for example, and ran out of federal money to build all of the bridges over the wash. However, the channeling of the wash allowed condos to be built in places along its newly narrowed western border, and money from the taxes paid on the newly usable land was used to finally complete the bridges years later.

Its money having been spent on the park system, the city of Scottsdale allowed the downtown area, immediately to the east of the central shopping district on Scottsdale Blvd. to decay, and by the early 1970s, the area became a swath of old abandoned wooden buildings with broken windows. However, shortly after the park system was built, Ms. McCormick, the owner of McCormick Ranch, died, and instead of preserving the ranch as mostly scrub land, the McCormick ranch/Scottsdale Ranch area of Scottsdale was developed into homes and business parks, and began to generate tax revenues for the city. Because of the rising status of the city from the newly-built parks and golf course system, the developers were able to upgrade the houses they built in what became the McCormick Ranch/Scottsdale Ranch portions of the city, which opened up Scottsdale to the north and added a wide eastern portion, bulging on the middle of the map shown above. The nouveau riche that quickly filled these more expensive homes became the butt of many jokes and the source of the "Snottsdale" or "Snobbsdale" nickname. Nevertheless, the tax money that the city received from the development of McCormick Ranch was used to purchase the dilapidated area adjacent to Old Town via its powers of eminent domain, demolish the few remaining wooden buildings that had not by then been burned to the ground by vandals, and build a performing arts center and a restaurant row in place of part of it. The upscale locally owned restaurants that had been leaving the downtown area because of the blight were invited to be the first tenants in the restaurant row if they stayed in the area in the difficult years in which it and the arts center were built, and when the arts center and restaurants opened in the late to mid 1970s, it became another draw for the city.[citation needed]

Seeing the once narrow city of Scottsdale annex area to the north and east, the city of Phoenix annexed a then undeveloped six foot wide, miles long stretch of county land north of Phoenix, immediately to the west of McCormick Ranch, effectively extending that western boundary for miles. Because city services would have to be provided on any annexed land, the merely 6 foot wide limit allowed Phoenix to annex the portion inexpensively, yet the annexation effectively blocked Scottsdale[citation needed]

During this period, the city government of Scottsdale was seen as one with progressive ideas. To the dismay of many businesses, the city passed one of the earliest sign ordinances, restricting the size and height of signs and billboards. The city stated it was protecting the safety of its residents, which it claimed were getting into traffic accidents craning their necks to see higher signs. The ordinance was highly controversial at the time and the city was taken to the U.S. Supreme Court, but now such ordinances are common. Scottsdale also contracted out its fire department in what was to be a wave of the privatization of operations of city government that never materialized. Afraid of lawsuits if it used the red color of firetrucks of other cities in the U.S., the company that took over the contract painted the fire engines a fluorescent greenish yellow. The city also developed the first robot arm garbage truck, replacing crews who dumped cans into a train of open trailers pulled by a truck, with a single operator sitting in an air conditioned cab.

From its official incorporation in 1951 with a population of 2000, the town of Scottsdale has grown to a 2007 Census of 240,710. It is now the state's sixth-largest city. Scottsdale is commonly defined by its high quality of life, and in 1993 was named the "Most Livable City," in the United States by the United States Conference of Mayors. This title is notoriously lampooned across the state because of the high cost of living in Scottsdale. It is continually ranked as one of the premier golf and resort destinations in the world, with a sizable portion of tax revenue being derived from tourism. It is also home to the FBR Open Golf Tournament held at the Tournament Players Club, which carries the distinction of the best-attended event on the PGA Tour. Learn More about Scottsdale Arizona at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottsdale,_Arizona

Data Flurry is a full fledged Phoenix Arizona web design company that will cater to everyones needs. We are surrounding the following cities. Phoenix web design , Chandler web design , Mesa web design , Gilbert web design, Tempe web design , Scottsdale web design , Ahwatukee web design , Glendale web design , Sun City web design , Queen Creek web design , Apache Junction web design and more.


SEO Terms Glossary
Internet Marketing Online Marketing Search Engine Optimization Advertising Agencies
Marketing Services Website Traffic Advertising Agency Internet Advertising
Marketing Company Marketing Firm SEO Submit Site
Search Engine Marketing Website Advertising Marketing Consulting SEO Consultant
Search Engine Submission SEO Services Increase Traffic Website Marketing
SEO Company Online Advertising Website Promotion WebSite Optimization

Offering Search Engine Optimization (seo) and Website Design to these locations.

 

Anchorage Alaska

Chicago Illinois

Charlotte North Carolina

Charleston South Carolina

Montgomery Alabama

Indianapolis Indiana

Fargo North Dakota

Sioux Falls South Dakota

Little Rock Arkansas

Kansas City Kansas

Omaha Nebraska

Nashville Tennessee

Phoenix Arizona

Lexington Kentucky

Portsmouth New Hampshire

Houston Texas

Los Angeles California

New Orleans Louisiana

Newark New Jersey

Salt Lake City Utah

Denver Colorado

Boston Massachusetts

Albuquerque New Mexico

Burlington Vermont

Hartford Connecticut

Baltimore Maryland

Las Vegas Nevada

Richmond Virginia

Wilmington Delaware

Portland Maine

New York New York

Seattle Washington

Orlando Florida

Detroit Michigan

Cincinnati Ohio

Milwaukee Wisconsin

Atlanta Georgia

Duluth Minnesota

Tulsa Oklahoma

Charleston West Virginia

Honolulu Hawaii

Branson Missouri

Portland Oregon

Cheyenne Wyoming

Des Moines Iowa

Jackson Mississippi

Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Washington DC

Boise Idaho

Bozeman Montana

Providence Rhode Island

 
       
Phoenix Arizona Queen Creek Arizona Glendale Arizona Scottsdale Arizona
Gilbert Arizona Chandler Arizona Apache Junction Arizona Sun City Arizona
Ahwatukee Arizona Tempe Arizona Mesa Arizona  


Copyright 2007-2008 A DataFlurry Phoenix SEO Marketing, Inc - All Rights Reserved
Terms & Agreements | Design Marketing Jobs | Contact | SiteMap

A DataFlurry Phoenix SEO Marketing, Inc offers Affordable Search Engine Optimization Marketing as SEO Consultants & SEO Expert.

We are a Phoenix SEO & phoenix Search Engine Optimization Agency

Old Links Directory / New Links Directory

Scottsdale Arizona Web Site Design - Website Development