About the studio

One person on the work.
Start to finish.

Bibelhausen Digital is led — and built — by Nick Bibelhausen. Strategy, design, code, and the result: one name on all of it.

Nick Bibelhausen on the field at the Cincinnati Reds' ballpark, wearing a Cincy jersey and sunglasses, with the Great American Tower and the downtown skyline rising behind the stands.
Nick Bibelhausen — Founder, Designer & Developer

Founder

Technology has always been more than an interest.

Design judgment, backed by real-world technical discipline.

I'm a fourth-year Cybersecurity student at Miami University and a Cyberspace Technician in the Air National Guard. From early on I wanted to know how the systems under the surface actually work — how they're built, how they fail, and what makes them dependable.

Serving in the Air National Guard has meant real work with networks, secure communications, and troubleshooting technology people depend on — in an environment where precision, accountability, and security are the baseline rather than the goal. That mindset carries straight into how I build websites: plan deliberately, execute carefully, and get right the details a visitor never notices but always feels.

Through Bibelhausen Digital, you work with me from the first conversation through launch. Strategy, design, and implementation stay connected because they're the same pair of hands — which is why the site ends up built around your business instead of forced into a recycled template.

Fourth-year Cybersecurity student
Miami University
Cyberspace Technician
Air National Guard
Founder, Designer & Developer
Bibelhausen Digital

Why the studio exists

The person you hire is the person who builds it.

Most businesses get their website one of two ways: a template someone filled in, or an agency where the work passes through five sets of hands. Both produce the same thing — a site that could belong to anyone. For a new venture that's fatal, because a generic site is the only impression you have. For an established business it's quieter but worse: the site actively undersells what walking in the door feels like.

A founder-led studio is the third option. Senior attention on every decision, because there's no junior to hand it to. Direct answers, because there's no one in between. And a website that's actually about your business, because the person designing it is the person who asked you all the questions.

Direct communication
Questions go to the person building the site and come back with real answers.
Design and development together
No handoff gap where designs get 'adapted'. What's designed is what ships.
Accountability
One name on the work. If something's wrong, you know exactly who fixes it.
Ownership and support
Your domain, your content, your site — with a direct line for the life of it.

What the work covers

Five disciplines, one desk.

A website needs all of these to be any good. Splitting them across a team is where most of the quality leaks out.

Strategy
What the site has to accomplish, for whom, and how it earns the inquiry — settled before design starts.
Visual design
Art direction built from the business itself. A vintage shop and a tavern should not leave the same impression.
Development
Hand-built and static where static wins. No page builder, no plugin stack to maintain.
Performance & accessibility
Fast on a phone on bad signal, operable by keyboard, legible to a screen reader. Not an afterthought pass.
Support
A direct line to the person who built it, for as long as you run it.

Fit

A good fit, honestly assessed.

Strong work comes from the right match — at any stage. Here's what that looks like, both ways.

  • Good fit:You're launching something new and it has to look credible from day one.
  • Good fit:You run an established business whose website undersells it.
  • Good fit:You want one accountable person, not a rotating project team.
  • Good fit:You care what the site does for the business, not just how it looks.
  • Not a fit:You need the cheapest possible build, fastest possible turnaround.
  • Not a fit:You want a template filled in with your logo and left alone.

The work says the rest. Then let's talk.