Your Online Presence – YOP.
We have offices all over the country – Our client base is UK Nationwide
Website Design in Tring
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 Tring 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 Tring
General Info
Tring is a small market town and civil parish in the Borough of Dacorum, Hertfordshire, England. It is situated in a gap passing through the Chiltern Hills, classed as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, 30 miles northwest of London, and linked to London by the Roman road of Akeman Street, by the modern A41 road, by the Grand Union Canal and by the West Coast Main Line to London Euston.
History
In 1315 the town was granted a market charter by Edward II. This charter gave Faversham Abbey the right to hold weekly markets on Tuesdays, and a ten-day fair starting on 29 June, the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul. It also prevented the creation of any rival markets within a day’s travel of the town.
Until 1440, there was a small village east of Tring called Pendley. The landowner Sir Robert Whittingham received a grant of free warren from King Henry VI. He enclosed 200 acres and tore down the buildings on the land, returning the estate to pasture, and built a manor house, Pendley Manor. This house was variously inhabited by the Verney, Anderson and Harcourt families until the mid-19th century.