We owe our existence to Business Week.

In 1992, the aforementioned publication ran an article about the emergence of the "virtual corporation."

The idea was that, with cell phones, email, and pdf files, you don't really need to stick a bunch of people under one (expensive) roof to get some decent work done. Seemed like a good idea to us. It also seemed like a good idea to the Port of Seattle, who hired Worker Bees as their agency.

The virtues of virtual.

Instead of hoping we've got the people on staff to fit your tasks, Worker Bees assembles a team with the precise skills and experience your organization needs.

Your team can grow as you need more assistance, and shrink as your activity and budget demand. Or let's put this another way: You don't pay for a traditional agency's high, fixed overhead.


Not just advertising.

With TIVO, the web, and 101 other distractions, you really can't rely on mass media advertising any longer. Instead, you need to hit people when and where they're ready to listen.

For instance, we just recommended that one of our clients use a banquet as their major marketing tool. For another, we just helped put together a digital sales presentation. Right now we're working on a video.

The point is, while advertising still has its place (and we're pretty good at it), we'd rather do what's right for you. Not just another ad.

OUR FIRST AD FOR OUR FIRST CLIENT
Port of Seattle

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