Rhonda Negard

Web Design & Development

Rhonda Negard

Fat Dog Creatives

Awards

HERMES Creative Awards

  • Aphrodite Divine Confections
    • Platinum, overall website design
  • Over the Top Cake Supplies
    • Platinum, overall website design
  • Palatable Painting
    • Gold, overall website design
  • San Antonio Pets Alive!
    • Honorable mention, overall website design

About Rhonda Negard

Your Website Should Reduce Your Workload, Not Add to It.

Most founders treat their website as a marketing surface. You treat it as a core business system. At Fat Dog Creatives, we design websites that replace vigilance with structure, producing reliable output instead of storing fragile information. We eliminate the cognitive load that comes with managing content, so your team can publish with confidence, scale complexity without entropy, and trust the system instead of working around it. If your website is part of your operation, it should behave like one.

Why Fat Dog Creatives

People ask about the name. Is it a commentary on my diet? My fitness goals? No.

It’s an homage to my husky mix pup, Shiner (whose spots are represented by the spots in the logo), my shepherd mix pup, Zacky (who was, admittedly, a bit “sturdy”), and a nod to that Friends episode where Monica’s nickname was “Big Fat Goalie.” I’m a trivia and board game lover, so I mixed all of my favorite things up into one business name and icon. I wanted a name that sounded like a person you’d actually want to grab a drink with at The Pearl or ice cream in Helotes.

Fat Dog Creatives is professional, but we don’t wear ties (well, Clizby wears bowties but for fun). We’re easy to work with, we’re happy to be here, and we’ve been doing this since 2003.

I’m not just a freelancer; I’m a strategist. I don’t just design for clients in New Braunfels, Boerne, or Spring Branch, I also served as adjunct faculty member teaching UX/UI design for a local bootcamp and design and layout at the Art Institute of San Antonio.

I don’t just “make things pretty.” I help executives-turned-entrepreneurs in Cibolo, Schertz, and Bulverde stop talking like corporate robots and start connecting with humans.