Web Redesign for National Nonprofit
- Web Design
- $50,000 to $199,999
- Sep. 2015 - Ongoing
- Quality
- 5.0
- Schedule
- 5.0
- Cost
- 5.0
- Willing to Refer
- 5.0
"You get that small town/small business feel in a really big city with a big development firm like theirs."
- Other industries
- Washington, District of Columbia
- 11-50 Employees
- Phone Interview
- Verified
WDG built a custom website for a nonprofit using WordPress. After discovery and wireframing, they mapped out the navigation and helped implement a rebrand for the organization.
WDG made web development seem like magic. Traffic has increased 200% since the launch, and all other metrics are trending up. The WDG team delivered a flexible design that allows for quick changes, but more importantly, they were a family-style business with a real desire to build relationships.
A Clutch analyst personally interviewed this client over the phone. Below is an edited transcript.
BACKGROUND
Introduce your business and what you do there.
BoardSource is the recognized leader in nonprofit board leadership and supports, trains, and educates nonprofit leaders from across the country and throughout the world. With almost three decades of experience, BoardSource provides leaders with an extensive range of tools, resources, and research data to increase board effectiveness and strengthen organizational impact. It is also the national voice for inspired and effective board leadership. I serve as the vice president of marketing and communications.
OPPORTUNITY / CHALLENGE
What challenge were you trying to address with WDG?
We had a website that we hosted inside of our AMS. It was on a CMS platform, but it was nonresponsive, not flexible, non-scalable, and archaic. We hired WDG to completely develop a brand new online presence using the technology of WordPress.
SOLUTION
What was the scope of their involvement?
We completely overhauled how we organized the content on our website. There was a lot of discussion about how we wanted our menu and navigation; we went back and forth with WDG and we both landed on something we thought was going to be really great and fit our needs and those we serve. There was input from us and input from them — it was a great collaboration.
Once they came up with the structure, they really understood where we were coming from in terms of what we wanted to be different on this website compared to how it was on the website we were using at the time. They did a lot of discovery with us. When the wireframes came back we were thrilled. We loved it! When the first design mock-up came back, I didn’t love the colors that they chose. We were about to go through a full rebrand and had been working on updating our new color palette and brand standards. However, after we saw their first design it helped us realize what we liked and what we didn’t. It actually helped us put our new colors together and when we sent them to WDG they seemed excited about the boldness and the direction we were headed.
SEO also was a huge focus. The URLs of our previous website were 100 characters long, and they made no sense. If you know anything about digital marketing and search engine optimization, you know your URL is very important. We had very high hopes that this new website would drastically enhance our online presence. We talked a lot about how our MOZ score was really high when compared to other like-minded organizations within our sector. Our page rank was quite high as well. But paid advertising, direct traffic, and organic traffic were lower than we wanted.
The way WDG allocates resources to a project is different than how I’d worked with other web development firms, and it was a good different. You are working with different team members throughout the project with a seamless hand-off; it was exciting to work different experts directly and not just simply with one project manager. Something really great was the way WDG launched into our project. We did a huge staff kickoff and they brought us through some exercises that lasted a couple of hours. Our entire staff was able to participate and meet the several WDG team members we’d be working with. We wanted it to be a collaborative effort from our end and theirs; we wanted to make sure that everyone knew just how important this new website was to us and those we serve. It was very organized from the beginning.
Once those initial elements were done, we worked very closely with our developer, Kurtis, who is still there and who we still work with because we now have WDG on retainer. We primarily worked with him on the launch. Kurtis is a genius. We pretty much think he's magic. We would ask him, “How did you do that? That was magic! And so quick too”! That’s how it went throughout.
How did you come to work with WDG?
When I was first hired at BoardSource we had a webmaster because we really did need someone on staff with that type of knowledge and experience to manage the site. When he moved to an organization that focuses on web design, we certainly made updates and added critical information to the site, but we did not have the flexibility that we needed or the internal capabilities. In addition to not having the flexibility, the website was nonresponsive, and about 15% of our users are mobile users, so when you have a nonresponsive website it’s going to affect the user experience for those consumers, and sales for the organization. We went through an extremely extensive RFP process and talked with many different firms. We did not have a web development firm we were currently using, so we started from scratch. All of the research was done in-house. After receiving many proposals — and we didn’t just look at D.C.-based firms — we also looked at firms in Manhattan and Brooklyn, but WDG stood above the rest. It was a great experience from the very beginning and in the end, we were absolutely thrilled we had the opportunity to work with them.
How much have you invested with WDG?
It is a little bit tricky because, at the very end, they had to come on and do something that was completely out of scope (thankfully!), but I think, all in, it was $150,000.
What is the status of this engagement?
We started working with them in September 2015 and launched in October 2016. We have them on retainer, paying them monthly for updates and special projects. We would not have chosen any other firm for this!
RESULTS & FEEDBACK
Could you share any evidence that would demonstrate the productivity, quality of work, or the impact of the engagement?
Our MOZ score is now a 5.1; it was a 6.3. Our traffic rank is 180,000 or so, and we were at somewhere around 500,000 prior to launch. We were getting anywhere between 20,000 to 50,000 visitors to our website depending on the month and what we were doing. Now we are getting close to 100,000, so we’re up a lot. If you looked at our website metrics prior to redoing it this time last year, for example, about 85-90% of the traffic was coming from email marketing. Now over 50% of visits come from organic and direct traffic. Email marketing is probably reaching the same amount of people, but we have so many more people coming to our website that it is roughly only 15% of our traffic. And over 50% of our users are return visitors which is really exciting.
We absolutely love our newly redesigned website; for our users’ experiences and the internal team working on it now. One of the things that we really wanted was flexibility. WDG built us the most flexible WordPress I have ever worked with. It is based on the flexible design layout version and we can basically do anything that we want to. We create pages from scratch, and it is like… add this layout, add this, and add that. We certainly have our own internal standards and guidelines and business operations as it pertains to that, but it’s the most flexible website that there is.
How did WDG perform from a project management standpoint?
They did very well, especially considering the circumstances of the integration partner we had to part ways with mid-project; this company delayed our website launch about seven months. WDG stuck with it, being very supportive and helping us in the end when we were ‘in a pickle’ and needed to launch the website to help support our organization and new strategic direction. The integration partner simply couldn’t develop what they said that they could develop, and WDG had to broaden their original statement of work and adjust their timelines. WDG did a heck of a job sticking with us because it wasn’t always very easy.
What did you find most impressive about WDG?
The most impressive thing about WDG is that you feel like a part of their family in a way. They’re an organization that obviously works with a lot of clients and manages a lot of projects, but I feel like I am truly supported by them. You get that small business feel in a really big city with a big development firm like WDG. I would say that’s probably the most impressive. When we went over there for training, we all went out to happy hour. I know the names of their kids. I know that Homiera just got married. They take the time to get to know their clients and be really supportive. That’s the biggest thing that feels good about the partnership.
Are there any areas WDG could improve?
Not yet!
What tips or recommendations could you share that might increase the likelihood of success with WDG?
I think that they should hire WDG for their website project. Period.
RATINGS
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Quality
5.0Service & Deliverables
"<p>We were constantly impressed with their knowledge of technology, user experience, and analysis. They helped us to understand what we were looking for and to be able to take our goals and make it a reality.</p> "
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Schedule
5.0On time / deadlines
"<p>They don’t typically miss deadlines, and they are very communicative. I would award bonus points here for their support whenever we had a really challenging project that disrupted their timelines and their business as it was disruptive to ours.</p> "
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Cost
5.0Value / within estimates
"<p>WDG constantly went out of their way, and outside the scope of our original project, to benefit us. They knew we were a nonprofit and didn’t have a ton of resources, but they were very flexible with us.</p> "
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Willing to Refer
5.0NPS
"<p>I have already referred them to a bunch of different people when I talk about our website. I’m in marketing and communications, so I have a lot of colleagues and peers in the nonprofit space and others.</p>