INTERACTIVITY
The Gopher Systems website development team have the skills to offer you a website with enhanced "interactivity".
Rather then just having information for the user to read, or photographs for them to look at - your website can actually interact with the user allowing you to provide them with custom products, or simply make your content easier to access.
Here are some examples of how enhanced programming can bring a level of interactivity to your website that you cannot achieve with any other form of conventional advertising:
Make-A-Sign - How it Works
The Make-A-Sign website allows customers to design their own signs & labels online and see a rough idea of what it would look like before they order. It will show the customer the style, colour, and size of text they have chosen in relation to the overall size of the sign or label.
Marlborough College Summer School - How it Works
The Marlborough College Summer School website is able to keep track of all the Summer School courses that a customer wishes to book for the 2006 Summer School programme. It then automatically populates this information into a form for the customer to book and pay for their courses online.
The payment is processed manually by the Summer School staff, however the credit card details are collected from the customer via a secure payment system.
For those customers who do not wish to pay online with their credit card, the course details are passed into a printer-friendly form for them to print off, complete their payment details, and post to Marlborough College Summer School.
By making the process of registering for courses easier, it is hoped the booking process will be less problematic for customers and Summer School staff processing the requests.
H & B QuickGrind Ltd - How it Works
H & B QuickGrind is a company that manufactures cutting tools for the automotive, aerospace and mould and die industries. Gopher Systems built several interactive elements to bolt onto their existing website that allow users to custom design the exact tool they require and see an approximate representation of this tool on screen. As the user adjust variables to "build" their tool on screen, the system remembers all of this information and when requested, sends the exact specifications off to QuickGrind. The user can actually order immediately, or simply request further information about the tool they have designed.