A little About Us
How It All Started
G-d, man, & his computer
Holy Industries got it's start in the holiest of all places: Jerusalem. It was there on one fateful evening sometime in Av, 5781 when David Benjamin Moroz (Founder / CEO) had the epiphany to bring holiness to business, and likewise bring business unto holiness. For "Man's physical affairs should correspond to his spiritual affairs." - The 7th Lubavitch Rebbe.

David Benjamin Moroz
Founder & CEO
David is 28 years old and has been accumulating marketing and branding experience for over 14 years, starting his first web development company when he was 14 years old, Frontier Web Productions. Now he's off to the stars, no really (he thinks) he's going to start his own aerospace company. For David, holiness means to sanctify upward, literally.

20%
Of Everything
Tithing isn't just an obligation. It's first and foremost, one of the greatest opportunities for [all] mankind: to make their makings holy. To give it to G-d Almighty, Blessed Be He. For only G-d can bring to a level where it's truly eternal, I mean, sustainable. And sustainability, I mean Eternity, is what we really need.

The Logo
Elevated & Separated
Our logo is meant to signify holiness, meaning separate, upwards, to G-d Almighty. We use circles because there's nothing more minimal than a circle. A dot is the least material thing one can make, therefore the closest thing to the non-material or spiritual is a dot. The dot is also a circle. Blue corresponds to kindness and higher transcendent worlds. It is said the tablets were sapphire and so too the Throne of Glory. The sky above is blue. And so we saw it best that blue be the color of Holy Industries.

What Is Marketing?
Half of your business
A business has it's outside and inside. Marketing deals primarily in the market, the outside. While marketing uses aesthetics (flyers, website, etc.) to sell products outside of the business, marketing also guides the making of the product inside the business, making it marketable. If done right, it will be (the marketer collecting feedback from) the market that will define what the market wants, and hence what the company should even make.
