Before websites, before SEO, before anyone was talking about digital marketing, I was a newspaper reporter and editor.
I learned to write on deadline, tell stories people actually wanted to read, and figure out what mattered to an audience in about thirty seconds. That turned out to be pretty useful for building websites.
I started building sites in 1998 — back when web design meant figuring out things nobody had figured out yet. Over the next two and a half decades I co-owned a web database development company, worked in advertising production, and co-owned a music industry viral marketing analytics firm. Every chapter added something: a sharper eye for content, a deeper understanding of how businesses actually work, a fluency in the technical side of digital that most marketers never develop.
In 2024, I rebranded as Deep River Digital — not because the work changed, but because the name finally caught up with the philosophy. Depth over shortcuts. Real partnerships over quick projects. Infrastructure that keeps producing results long after the initial build is done.
In an era where anyone can generate a hundred blog posts overnight with AI, my bet is that depth wins. The businesses who invest in real strategy, real content, and real relationships will outperform the ones chasing only volume. So far, that bet is paying off.