Scott has a natural eye for design which showed up at an early age by always have a pencil and paper close at hand for frequent sketching and drawing. He briefly published a small newspaper for the neighborhood as a child, and started his career writing and publishing a company newsletter when he was in college.
Over the next 15 years he worked as a graphic designer in a number of pre-press, advertising and marketing communication positions in Denver CO, Knoxville TN, and St. Louis MO, including one of the lead agencies for Anheuser-Busch. In 2012 he broadened his skillset by returning to school and learning to code websites and design user interfaces, going on to sharpen his skills at companies as varied as Nelnet, Boeing, cycling apparel company Primal Wear, and custom application developers.
Those experiences and the skills he has developed over the last nearly 30 years give him expertise with nearly every type of project in both print and digital design.
Scott is a graduate of Colorado State University, a triathlete and mountain biker. A long-time transplant to Colorado, he lives in Parker, a small town southeast of the Denver metro area. He is the only person he knows of who started passing a kidney stone in the middle of a root canal.
Yes, he can laugh about it…now. At the time, eh, not so much.
The name Electric Ballet came from an episode of Who’s Line Is It Anyway. Once he composed himself after being doubled over from laughter, Scott thought that if the unusualness of the phrase stuck in his brain it would probably stick in everyone else’s, making it a memorable name for a business. It struck him as an apt if somewhat eccentric combination of what the Internet is powered by and the technical skills and artistry he brings to his design and digital marketing services.
Contact Scott to learn more about how he can help your company or organization website perform and be better noticed on the web. Email him at scott.miller@electricballet.com or call 303.523.3891
Yes, the header image is AI-generated which is why the desk and chair legs are, well, not quite right!
Let’s teach your website some new moves!