My experience and skill sets are unique because of the results my work has achieved in a wide range of categories; communication/marketing strategy, leadership, digital media, and programming. My marketing ideas work. There are too many success stories to list in this bio.
The NPower coding training has given me the ability to take static digital media and transform it into an exciting user experience, not only on the desktop but, phones and tablets. NPower’s hands-on practical exercises make learning complicated concepts easy and productive.
While I enjoy my work, my passion is work that gets results. My skills were recognized by several Ad Club’s as best in the category for televisions/radio spots, ad campaigns, branding, presentations, packaging, posters, and Ad Person of the year.
While enlisted in the US Army, I applied and was accepted to be a Combat Artist. This work is part of our Country's War Archives. After graduation from NPower, I want to be a vital part of a company team that wants to grow and can utilize my marketing strategy and digital media skills to educate their market and increases profits.

Mutt & Bolt Website
Granted, experimentation can sound a bit intimidating. I know because I’ve worked with hundreds of entrepreneurs who feel that “social media tests” are some obscure tactics only data scientists can handle. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
Given the right tools, and having adopted the right mindset, I strongly believe that anyone can manage a lean social media testing program. I’m writing this article to share seven simple tests that you can run today.
But before we begin testing, you need to lay out some metrics to input your data in for analysis.
To make sure your test results are as clear and informative as possible, decide which metrics matter for the changes you are trying to provoke. For example, if your main social media goal is to increase shares, prioritize metrics like shares, retweets, and repins.
That being said, for each of the following test ideas, I’ll be sharing two alternative social media post versions that you can try. When you think about these different versions, here’s a handy format to collect data:
Introduction to Mutt and Bolt App
They quote a 2009 study from Georgia Tech where over 1 million Pinterest graphics were evaluated to determine which colors were related with the most shared pins.
Researchers concluded that red, purple and pink promote sharing, while green, black, blue and yellow all stop people from sharing.
Considering that fonts can also play an instrumental role in how social media graphics are shared, launch two posts where the only difference is the font used to communicate the message.
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"Bob's creativity was just astounding from start to finish he came in week after week with something that blew me away."