About Jen Print E-mail

Jen Kramer McKibben is the perfect combination of geek and non-geek. I guess you could say that she is technically bi-lingual. Trust her, she's a trained professional!

For nearly nine years, she has been educating clients, colleagues, friends and graduate students about the meaning of a "quality website." As a former business sole proprietor, she has always believed that there is plenty of work to go around and that fellow professionals should work together in order to offer the best possible solutions to all clients.

Jen develops sites that are functional, usable, accessible, and supportive of business and marketing goals. She is a senior faculty member at the Marlboro College Graduate Center, teaching courses and workshops in web site design and management. She is the Program Director for the Master's of Science in Internet Technologies program (MSIT), advising students and overseeing courses and faculty pertaining to the degree. She has also previously taught at Champlain College and the Community College of Vermont. Jen earned a BS in biology at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and an MS in Internet Strategy Management at the Graduate Center of Marlboro College. She is most recently an Adobe Dreamweaver 8 Certified Developer.

Jen currently works as the Senior Interface Developer and is a co-owner of 4Web, Inc.

 
Bokardo - Social Design by Joshua Porter
A Blog about Social Web Design
  • Passionates
    Robert Scoble has a nice piece on “passionates”, people who are early adopters of technology. He says that companies need to focus on passionates in order to drive their business forward, as non-passionates just don’t care enough to share and promote you. He makes a really good point: it’s better to have 100,000 passionate users [...]
  • Tripit Employee Pretending to be Disgruntled Dopplr User?
    In On the Internet, people know if you’re a dog, my friend John Eckman details an interesting situation which underscores the importance of identity and revealing who you are in appropriate places on the Internet. John wrote a great post the other day comparing some newly released features from the travel startup Dopplr with those [...]
  • Can Interfaces be Evil?
    Yesterday I wrote an unthoughtful post about an email I received from Slideshare. I analyzed the email as an interface and ended up calling it evil, pointing out that I wanted to find out more about something but had to commit to the invitation in order to do so. At the time, this frustrated the [...]

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