Your Online Presence – YOP.
We have offices all over the country – Our client base is UK Nationwide
Website Design in Minster
Your Online Presence is a website design & digital marketing agency, who love creating websites and marketing campaigns that look great and engage customers. The main focus of our work is never to solely produce an attractive web page; we understand how important functionality and delivery of your brand message can be and we don’t get distracted by design for design’s sake.
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 Website Design in Minster 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 Minster
General Info
Minster, also known as Minster-in-Thanet, is a village and civil parish in the Thanet District of Kent, England. The village is officially inside Ramsgate and to the northeast of Canterbury; it lies just south-west of Kent International Airport and just north of the River Stour. Minster is also the “ancient capital of Thanet”.
History
In 597 Augustine of Canterbury is said, by the Venerable Bede, to have landed with 40 men at nearby Ebbsfleet, in the parish of Minster-in-Thanet, before founding a monastery in Canterbury; a cross marks the spot of his landing. Minster itself originally started as a monastic settlement in 670 AD. The buildings are still used as nunneries today. The first abbey in the village was founded by St Domneva, a widowed noblewoman, whose daughter St Mildred, is taken as the first abbess.
The parish church of St Mary-the-Virgin is largely Norman but with significant traces of earlier work, the problems of which are unresolved. The nave is impressive with five bays, and the crossing has an ancient chalk block vaulting. The chancel is Early English with later flying buttresses intended to halt the very obvious spread of the upper walls.