news

Publications We've Written For

  • Business Today
  • Church Business
  • Craft Trends
  • Day Spa Magazine
  • Downtown Business News
  • Educational Dealer
  • Jay Conrad Levinson's Guerilla Marketing Newsletter
  • Ralph Wilson's Web Marketing Today
  • Island Sun Times
  • Marketing Healthcare Today
  • Newsletter on Newsletters
  • Opportunity World & Money n' Profits Magazine
  • Paddlesports Business
  • Photo Marketing Magazine
  • Pizza Marketing Quarterly
  • Professional Insurance Agents of Connecticut, New Hampshire, New Jersey and New York
  • Real Estate Weekly
  • Risk Management Magazine
  • Small Business Notes
  • Small Business Opportunities
  • Southern Hospitality Magazine

Selected Articles and Publications

  • About.com

    "Edit.com is different because it is not a Web site hosting service and it's not an offline desktop editor either." Read the article.

  • Entrepreneur

    "Customers may overlook an outdated print piece, but they expect your website to be correct and up-to-date at all times." Read the article.

  • Entrepreneur

    "You know the drill--you're visiting a business's website, looking for information on the latest sale or the types of services offered, and when you click on a link, you find it's broken or the printout coupon has expired. The website is out-of-date, and that entrepreneur is losing business because of it. Don't let this happen to your business..." Read the article.

  • Globe and Mail

    "Among other things, websites are often the first impression your company makes -- they're where many people actually discover your business in today's networked world. And websites are a primary way to reach out and touch customers within local communities and around the world. . . . And where to begin? The first step forward is a step back, says Steve Grushcow, the CEO of edit.com, a website maintenance services company based in Brooklyn, N.Y. "Ask, 'what do I want the website to do for my business?" Read the article.

  • Smallbusinesscomputing

    "The results are hard to argue with. Online sales have increased four-fold over a five-month period. "I can barely keep up with the business." Read the article.

  • WebMarketing Today

    "If your business is too small to have an in-house person with HTML skill, there's another approach." Read the article.

  • Law Technology News

    "Edit.com provides small firms with a non-technical means to... immediately change text, formatting, images, links and add new pages... newsletters, databases, or changing the site structure and layout." Read the article.

  • New York Times

    "Q. How would I go about creating a Web site for my family's business? ..." Read the article.

  • PC Magazine

    "Every business needs to update its Web site content periodically; stagnant pages don't make a compelling case for your company. But most small businesses don't have the in-house expertise to edit Web sites, and calls to an outside contractor can be costly.... [Edit.com has] available custom-design and development work in an effort to provide a one-stop solution for small Web sites." Read the article.

  • Pizza Marketing Quarterly

    From an Edit.com authored article: "As the old saying goes: You never get a second chance to make a first impression. That statement is especially true when referring to a business website. Customers worldwide are looking for products & services online... Site navigation is the primary element in a professional website. If your customers cannot easily find what they are looking for, they will look elsewhere and that usually means your competition... The changes will not cost a fortune, but the results may produce one."

  • Law Office Computing

    "When a law firm is thinking about how to deal with Web sites, there are two related but distinct issues that must be addressed. First, designing and creating the structure of the site, and second, developing and maintaining the content of the site... There is nothing worse than a poorly maintained Web site where the content is 3 years old—it tells your clients that you don't care about the Web site as an extension of your business... For people with minimal Web design skills who want to stay on top of maintaining their Web site, it's hard to beat Edit.com."

  • About.com

    "No more hiring someone to do it for you or trying to learn new code... If you need extra help with your Web site, like databases, ecommerce, newsletter subscriptions, or changing the whole site layout, they can help you there too."

  • IpFrontline.com

    "Edit.com gives business owners the control they are looking for... Edit.com takes the guesswork out of website maintenance and empowers business owners... One satisfied Edit.com customer is the Montana-based law firm of Browning, Kaleczyz, Berry and Hoven, P.C. "We have a small, non-technical staff, and we wanted an easy way to keep our website useful to our current and potential customers," says Steve Browning, a partner in the firm. It's comforting to have a reliable company for our website needs."

  • Kansas City Star

    "There are lots of reasons you might want to fire the developer of your Web site, but the most practical is the continuing cost of making changes. We found a fix. It's called Edit.com."

  • Charleston Regional Business Journal

    "An online service from Edit.com gives business owners the control they want."

  • Industrial Distribution

    "Edit.com gives business owners the control they are looking for when considering Web site maintenance."

  • Gwinnett Business Journal

    "Webmaster. Even the name is daunting and strikes respect and confusion into the hearts of befuddled professionals everywhere... Edit.com gives business owners control over their sites, and our experts are just a click away if they need help."

  • Small Biz Resource

    "Potential users simply sign up at Edit.com and schedule a 15-minute phone orientation."

Questions? To speak with a DirectAccess Account Manager, call: 877.387.2549 x3