Your Online Presence – YOP.
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SEO in Royal Tunbridge Wells
Your Online Presence is a website design & digital marketing agency, who specialise in SEO and marketing campaigns. SEO is the science of adjusting a website’s code, content and structure to make it visible on a search engine result page for particular keywords or combinations of keywords. The main focus of our work is to generate a return on your investment, and SEO is capable of generating very attractive returns by bringing people to your website through search engines.
Return on investment can be the most important thing about any online marketing strategy, which is a point often overlooked by many other web design agencies. Understanding your industry, your business and the competitive environment in which you operate before we start on the creative process is a key part of our working process. Start your SEO in Royal Tunbridge Wells today!

View our most recent Website projects below!

Warnes Interiors

Walthamstow Windows

123 Estate Agent

The Good Pea Co.

Browns Transport

Noah Capitol

Clear Investment

Winstree Financial

AM Gas Services
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Facts about Royal Tunbridge Wells
General Info
Royal Tunbridge Wells, previously just Tunbridge Wells, is a town in western Kent, England, 30 miles south-east of central London, close to the border with East Sussex upon the northern edge of the High Weald, whose sandstone geology is exemplified by the rock formations at the Wellington Rocks and High Rocks. The town came into being as a spa in the Restoration and enjoyed its heyday as a fashionable resort in the mid-1700s under Beau Nash when the Pantiles, and its chalybeate spring, attracted significant numbers of visitors who wished to take the waters.
History
The origin of the town today came in the seventeenth century. In 1606 Dudley, Lord North, a courtier to James I who was staying at a hunting lodge in Eridge in the hope that the country air might improve his ailing constitution, discovered a chalybeate spring. He drank from the spring and, when his health improved, he became convinced that it had healing properties.
Until 1676 little permanent building took place—visitors were obliged either to camp on the downs or to find lodgings at Southborough, but at this time houses and shops were erected on the walks, and every “convenient situation near the springs” was built upon. Also in 1676 a subscription for a “chapel of ease” was opened, and in 1684 the Church of King Charles the Martyr was duly built and the town began to develop around it.