Pallian Creative

Before Pallian Creative After Pallian Creative

What do you YOU think of the new design?

Do you like the way Pallian Creative redid the site?

We’re not done making changes. Please tell us what you like about the change and what you think we should work on next.

Why I was excited to have Pallian Creative remake Mixergy:

Elegant design: My goal with Mixergy is to expose you to ideas that will rock your world. I didn’t want to drown out the message with heavy design. That’s why I was attracted to the motto on Pallian’s homepage,  “simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”

Financial intelligence: Adarsh, the company’s founder, helped Timothy Sykes create one of the most profitable personal blogs. I wanted someone who understood the business side of the web so I could start building a business behind all these great interviews.

Development expertise: Pallian creative is behind two great Web apps: Tweetizen, which I use on Mixergy’s live interviews so viewers could Tweet to each other and guests. Chart.ly, which was bought out soon after launching.

Who should hire Pallian Creative?

Anyone who needs a Twitter app developed. Pallian created Tweetizen and Chart.ly, two great Twitter apps. Their apps got strong reviews on top tech blogs like Mashable and TechCrunch.

Anyone who needs enterprise-level Twitter programs. A lot of what they built to manage Tweetizen, can be used to help large teams manage their Twitter presence.

Companies that want to build a big pretense on social media. If what you’re looking for is basic social media work, you can hire a college student to do it for you. I think Pallian is the company you call when you’re ready for the kind of social media statement that the CEO of Zappos told me he was committed to.

Who should not hire Pallian Creative?

Anyone who wants blog design work. I think the company outgrew that business. I proudly watched Pallian outgrow me as they were working on my site. Big names–like Mashable, TechCrunch and Howard Lindzon–were starting to write about and do business with Adarsh on a regular-basis. I felt that I had the company’s full attention–Adarsh himself worked till 3:40 AM on the night the launch went live–but I also felt that with all the attention, the company was ready for bigger challenges than a simple blog redesign. (If that’s all you need, maybe Adarsh can recommend someone else.)