Remiah Trask will tell you that entrepreneurship was never really a choice for him. Both of his grandfathers ran their own businesses. His grandmother had her own. His parents followed the same path. By the time he was old enough to understand what a business was, he already knew that working for yourself was not just possible. It was expected. It was the family standard.
But even with that foundation, Remiah's entry into the business world came by accident. A friend needed a website for his wife's organization. Remiah had taken a couple of college classes on web design and decided to give it a shot. The site came together. It looked good. And then his wife Nikyla said something simple that changed the trajectory of everything: "You're actually really good at this. Maybe you can make a business out of it."
Nikyla has always been that voice. The one who sees what Remiah is capable of before he fully sees it himself. That dynamic has never changed. She is his managing partner today, and the reason he took the leap in the first place.
In 2010, Remiah officially launched Design Baton Rouge, a web design and marketing agency built from scratch with no investors, no safety net, and no roadmap. Just hustle, a genuine eye for design, and the conviction that every small business deserves a website that actually works. He grew it steadily, expanded the services, and eventually published a book, "You Can Build a Freaking Amazing Website," available on Amazon and Audible. Reviewers called it essential. One reader bought both the print and digital copies.
The Move to McKinney
The decision to leave Louisiana was not just a business decision. It was a family decision. Remiah and Nikyla have three kids. And like any parent who is serious about what they are building, they started asking harder questions about environment, opportunity, and what kind of life they were creating for their children.
God opened the door to North Texas. McKinney specifically. A community with strong schools, room to grow, and a spirit that matched what the Trask family was already building at home. They did not move here to survive. They moved here to thrive. And that same conviction is what drives everything Remiah does professionally.
The business relocated with them, rebranding as Freaking Amazing Marketing. FAM for short. The name was not just a marketing play. It was a statement of faith and intent rooted in the belief that if you are going to do something, you do it at the highest level possible. Not good enough. Freaking amazing. Every time.
Building the Infrastructure, Not Just the Sites
Today FAM operates at a different level. Remiah is not just building websites for individual clients. He is building the platform that lets consultants sell and deploy those websites at scale. DemoDrop, one of FAM's flagship products, is an AI-powered demo site generation and deployment system. It lets sales consultants show potential clients their actual finished website before a single dollar changes hands. The close rate on that approach is unlike anything else in the industry.
The concept is simple. The execution is complex. Instead of pitching a client on what a website could look like, you show them exactly what it will look like. Personalized. Live. Ready to claim. Faith taught Remiah that vision is the starting point of everything. DemoDrop is just vision made visible for business owners who need to see it to believe it.
And now, with Black Business Pulse, Remiah is turning those same infrastructure-building instincts toward something deeply personal. A platform built to put Black-owned businesses across North Texas in front of the communities that want to support them. The directory is free. The spotlights are automated. The articles, the social posts, the emails — all of it runs on the same systems FAM has spent years developing.
He did not build BBP because it made business sense, though it does. He built it because when he looked at his community in McKinney and across Collin County, he saw brilliance that was not being amplified. He saw business owners with real gifts and no platform. He saw his neighbors. And as a man of faith who believes that his gifts are not just for himself, he built them something.
The vision is national. BBP launches in North Texas but the architecture is built for Dallas, Houston, Atlanta, Chicago and beyond. Every city gets its own edition. Every Black-owned business gets its own profile. Every feature gets its own article, its own social post, its own email to share with the community.
If you ask Remiah what drives all of it, the answer is the same one it has always been. His faith. His wife. His three kids watching everything he does. And a family lineage of people who believed that ownership was not just a goal. It was the standard.
He is just building the tools to help the next generation meet it.


