Web Design For Furniture Company
- Web Design
- $10,000 to $49,999
- May 2016 - Feb. 2017
- Quality
- 5.0
- Schedule
- 5.0
- Cost
- 5.0
- Willing to Refer
- 5.0
"I felt like I had an in-house designer because they were such a major part of our work."
- Other industries
- Rockville, Maryland
- 51-200 Employees
- Phone Interview
- Verified
OrangeYouGlad conducted a full-scale redesign of a 2-business website, providing custom CMS development and SEO services to define branding elements and expand client options.
The editable platform now showcases a cohesive portfolio, attracting widespread interest from both prospective clients and the design community. OrangeYouGlad’s structured project management, outstanding creativity, and inherent understanding of each objective helped the partnership succeed.
A Clutch analyst personally interviewed this client over the phone. Below is an edited transcript.
BACKGROUND
Introduce your business and what you do there.
I am the marketing strategist for a 2-brand company involved in interior design and construction. I manage a variety of marketing, architecture, and design liaison.
One brand, Bialek, provides commercial furniture for offices, hospitals, healthcare settings, etc. We outfit business interiors and offer a good deal of design and planning. The other half, Intellistruct, is a prefabricated interior construction company that offers services for walls, ceilings, floors, etc. All supplies are made off-site, and then we quickly install the items on-site.
OPPORTUNITY / CHALLENGE
What challenge were you trying to address with OrangeYouGlad?
Our website desperately needed a complete overhaul. At the same time, I was redoing our branding internally. We were separating our brands to avoid client confusion.
SOLUTION
What was the scope of their involvement?
When we started, OrangeYouGlad came for a day-long discovery session. They had done a fair bit of work in advance, so we were reacting to things instead of brainstorming. They clearly understood who they were working with; my team doesn't do well with a blank piece of paper, but they’ll happily discuss set topics. We talked about which CMS [content management system] would work best and chose WordPress.
The hard-deliverable process was a new website, CMS, development and code, design, templates, and a bit of messaging help. We wanted to showcase our 2 different brands but connect them at the same time. The final deliverable was the developed website with the CMS.
OrangeYouGlad did a fair bit of illustrating and dividing content that we didn't have before to make simplify the process. That required a whole bunch of backend services.
It's all editable: I can go in and create as many items as I want, adjust any of those pieces to the user, and watch them magically drop into the right locations. If I didn’t know better, I would think that feature was hardcoded because it's so tightly integrated with everything else. We also have a blog, which is where I put our e-blasts. At first, we weren’t sure if we were going to include that, but we chose to have that feature in the end.
The functionality that’s attracted the biggest response is the fluidity of movement through the website. The site moves up and down and left and right in a logical progression, which was a big concern of ours initially.
I hope to use our projects or portfolio feature the most. It’s really complicated to figure out how to separate 2 brands but combine them in some way. We ended up creating a third piece to the site to showcase our combined projects. Users can navigate to this area in a million different ways, but all the content is in a set place for me to edit and upload. Content magically appears throughout the site in the appropriate vertical.
OrangeYouGlad also did SEO. Because I was revamping our processes, they were deeply involved in that effort. I felt like I had an in-house designer because they were such a major part of our work. We haven’t really grasped the best way to use social media, so OrangeYouGlad made sure everything was connected for us.
How did you come to work with OrangeYouGlad?
I found them through our manufacturing partner. When I visited OrangeYouGlad’s website, I was wowed by their designs and client list. Frankly, I thought I couldn't afford them, but we made it work.
At the start of the process, we interviewed 3 firms. At the end of the day, we wanted someone who’s creative and wouldn’t give us some templated system. We needed our partner to understand that a lot of our site is a brochure to help clients feel comfortable with us. The site needed to be beautiful, functional, and really express our distinctive design quality without making people think we dictate their style. It had to be beautifully designed but not so beautiful that people felt intimidated.
We interviewed OrangeYouGlad via video conference because they're in Brooklyn and we're in the DC area. Even over the phone and video, their inherent understanding—maybe even more than some of my colleagues—set them apart in my mind.
How much have you invested with OrangeYouGlad?
We spent $45,500, which was less than we should’ve paid. We got too excited about a couple of things, but I think that Tammy [Partner and Creative Director, OrangeYouGlad] decided to run with our additions and make them part of her portfolio. She uses third-party developers, so that cost included the developer. We never had to pay anyone besides Tammy.
What is the status of this engagement?
Our first interview happened in March of 2016. The work really kicked off in May of 2016, and we rolled out the site this past February. If we have questions, they're always responsive, so we're still communicating in that sense. In every other respect, the work is finished.
RESULTS & FEEDBACK
Could you share any evidence that would demonstrate the productivity, quality of work, or impact of the engagement?
We’re incredibly happy with the results. Our old website was awful, so it’s not really fair to compare it with our new site. With the old site, a visitor a day would have made us happy, and we've blown way past that with the new site. We get consistent responses from our clients. It's fun to hear that people are amazed by a furniture dealer's website. We’ve gotten great feedback from the web design community too. It's interesting to look at the analytics and see the number of visitors from design blogs, not from our clients.
We're using the website as our proposal process. I upload items to the site, which brands the content as ours, but then a potential client can go into their own proposal. That's minimized confusion between us and our manufacturers.
How did OrangeYouGlad perform from a project management standpoint?
They did a great job of keeping us in line. Tammy really excelled at getting people on board. She and I would spend time talking about different concerns with team members from my side. Our biggest concern was the number and timing of edits, but she was able to bring everyone on board by either tweaking things or walking them through the reasoning.
Because we kept adding things, the timeline stretched. I don't blame anyone for that. If I had to do it all over again, I would have just moved the deadline because we couldn't have dropped any portion of the work. Everything was so valuable to us, and that was proven by the end result.
What did you find most impressive about OrangeYouGlad?
They’re outstanding designers. Everything that they do—and I know people in town who've worked with them before—is customized for the client. I think of WordPress as just a template; that's definitely not the case.
They became a part of our team, embedded like some sort of mind meld. They understood our problems, weren’t intimidated by the solutions, and sifted through ideas to find the best options. They talked us through each of the steps. I don't think most consultants try to become an integral part of a firm like they did.
Are there any areas OrangeYouGlad could improve?
Because the developer was an outsider, I was worried that something would get lost in translation. But, OrangeYouGlad spent enough time with us and with the developer to minimize any issues.
RATINGS
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Quality
5.0Service & Deliverables
"Everyone who’s visited the site had a great reaction, even our more difficult colleagues."
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Schedule
5.0On time / deadlines
"If we didn't meet a deadline, it was our fault, not theirs."
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Cost
5.0Value / within estimates
"We probably got a $100,000 website from this process, but we certainly didn’t pay that much."
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Willing to Refer
5.0NPS
"I already have recommended them and will gladly do it again.