Hialeah Website Design

Website Design in Hialeah

Our Hialeah website design company creates sales opportunities for a wide variety of businesses.

 

Our services include Website Design, Internet Marketing, SEO, Corporate Branding, Web Video Spokespersons and Logo Design.

In the wrong hands, a website can either drive sales traffic, or turn prospects away in mere seconds. The right Hialeah website design agency will turn your website into a direct window into your organization. Sales Secret’s staff have the skill, experience, and vision to develop a website that is as intuitive as it is beautiful. It’s not enough that you just have a website. You must have a professional-looking site if you want to be taken seriously. Since many consumers now search for information online prior to making a purchase at a brick-and-mortar store, your site may well be the first, or last, chance you have at making a good impression on a potential buyer.

 

[himage]Miami Website Design
Miami Website Design
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[himage]Fort Lauderdale Social MediaFt Lauderdale Social Media[/himage] [himage]Miami E-Commerce Online StoreMiami E-Commerce Online Store[/himage] [himage]Miami Email Marketing
Miami Email Marketing
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[himage]Miami Projection AdvertisingMiami Projection Advertising[/himage] [himage]Miami Public RelationsMiami Public Relations[/himage]

 

[wpspoiler name=”Hialeah Website Design – 305-330-1622″ style=”wpui-blue”]We offer our website design services throughout Miami-Dade County, Florida including the cities of Aventura, Bal Harbour, Bay Harbor Islands, Biscayne Park, Coral Gables, Cutler Bay, Doral, El Portal, Fisher Island, Florida City, Golden Beach, Hialeah, Hialeah Gardens, Homestead, Indian Creek, Islandia, Kendall, Key Biscayne, Medley, Miami Beach, Miami Gardens, Miami Lakes, Miami Shores, Miami Springs, Naranja,North Bay Village, North Miami, Perrine, Pinecrest, South Miami Sunny Isles Beach, Surfside, Sweetwater, and West Miami.[/wpspoiler]

TEL: (305) 330-1622 | ADDRESS: 1111 Lincoln Road, 4th Floor, Miami Beach, Florida 33139

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[wpspoiler name=”Hialeah Website Design City Data” style=”wpui-blue”]

Hialeah is a city in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 226,419. The 2010 census recorded a population of 224,669, a decrease of just 0.8%, and still making it the sixth largest city in the state, a major municipality of Greater Miami and South Florida, and the tenth largest city in the United States among cities with a population density of more than 10,000/sq mile.

The Seminole interpretation of its name, “High Prairie”, evokes a picture of the grassy plains used by the native Indians coming from the everglades to dock their canoes and display their wares for the newcomers of Miami. This “high prairie” caught the eye of pioneer aviator Glenn Curtiss and Missouri cattleman James H. Bright who saw great potential in 1921.

In the early “Roaring ’20s”, Hialeah produced significant entertainment contributions. Sporting included the Spanish sport of jai-alai and greyhound racing, and media included silent movies like D.W. Griffith’s The White Rose which was made at the Miami Movie Studios located in Hialeah. However, the 1926 Miami Hurricane brought many of these things to an end.

In the years since its incorporation in 1925, many historical events and people have been associated with Hialeah. The opening of the Hialeah Park Race Track in 1925 (which was nicknamed the “Grand Dame”) as a horse track received more coverage in the Miami media than any other sporting event in the history of Miami up to that time and since then there have been countless horse racing histories played out at the world famous 220-acre (0.89 km2) park. It was considered one of the most grand of thoroughbred horse racing parks with its majestic Mediterranean style architecture and was considered the Jewel of Hialeah at the time.

The Park’s grandeur has attracted millions, included among them are names known around the world such as the Kennedy family, Harry Truman, General Omar Bradley, Winston Churchill, and J.P. Morgan. The Hialeah Park Race Track also holds the dual distinction of being an Audubon Bird Sanctuary due to its famous pink flamingos and being listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The famous aviatrix Amelia Earhart in 1937 said her final good-byes to the continental U.S. from Hialeah as she left on her ill-fated flight around the world in 1937.

While Hialeah was once envisioned as a playground for the elite, Cuban exiles, fleeing Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution as well as World War II Veterans and city planners transformed the city into a working-class community. Hialeah historian Fernandez-Kelly explained “It became an affordable Eden.” She further describes the city as “…a place where different groups have left their imprint while trying to create a sample of what life should be like.” Several waves of Cuban exiles, starting after The Cuban Revolution in 1959 and continuing through to the Freedom Flights from 1965–1973, the Mariel Boatlift in 1980, and the Balseros or boat people of the late 1990s, created what at least one expert has considered the most economically successful immigrant enclave in U.S. history as Hialeah is the only American industrial city that continues to grow.

From a population of 1,500 in 1925, Hialeah has grown at a rate faster than most of the ten largest cities in the State of Florida since the 1960s and holds the rank of Florida’s fifth-largest city, with more than 236,000 residents. The city is also one of the largest employers in Dade County. Predominantly Hispanic, Hialeah residents are characterized as having assimilated their cultural heritage and traditions into a hard-working and diverse community proud of its ethnicity and family oriented neighborhoods.

In January 2009 Forbes Magazine listed Hialeah as one of most boring cities in the United States citing the city’s large population and anonymity in the national media.