Thought Leadership Topics

Redesigning thought leadership landing pages

Deliverables:
UI, UX, Data Visualization, Strategy
Platforms:
Web & Responsive, Ceros
Team:
Content Writer, Art Director, Stakeholders
2 phone screens
As the lead designer, my goal was to create a unified and recognizable interactive style for our suite of thought leadership landing pages by establishing the visual brand guidelines and determining the creative direction for an engaging user experience across both new and refreshed existing pages. This thought leadership topic highlights how inflation disproportionately impacts Americans of color, offering organizations valuable consumer insights.

Impact

Color palette icon
The value of using typography, color, and whitespace intentionally to create visual hierarchy and to structure complex information. This improved comprehension and scannability.
Checklist icon
While C-level executives insights provide valuable input, it's equally vital to complement this with feedback from a diverse array of site users, ensuring a more holistic understanding of our audience's preferences and needs.
Collaboration, two people icon
How wireframing and prototyping can quickly test ideas and get stakeholder feedback prior to high-fidelity work. This allowed improving and refining the design efficiently.

Existing thought leadership landing pages and brand were not portraying value

Ipsos faced heavy text-based content pages that made it tough for users to quickly scan information. There was little visual hierarchy and information structure, which did not inspire users to uncover insights Ipsos has to offer.
Identifying key takeaways was challenging without visual cues like icons, diagrams or color coded sections to highlight important insights. Repetitive page layouts led to lack of variation and failed to orient users as they consumed the research findings.

Key issues

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Dense, keyword-stuffed copy that didn’t resonate
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Responsiveness isn’t always considered
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Data points are not communicated visually
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Lack of thoughtful information architecture

Previous design vs revamp version

Old
New

Old Landing Page

New Landing Page

Who are we talking to?

General public interested in economic issues, especially racial disparities
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Advocacy groups/non-profits focused on economic justice
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Policymakers researching inflation's unequal burden

Pain points

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Users may be frustrated by the overwhelming amount of text and may feel like they're sifting through irrelevant information
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Users might need a more user-friendly and visually engaging way to consume complex research findings quickly and effectively.

Enhancing clarity through responsiveness, interactions, data visuals, layout, imagery, and text

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Optimize web application: elevate user experience on mobile and desktop
User interface Icon
Provide a user-friendly experience: make it easy for users to understand what Ipsos offers and how to take action
Design-Ruler Icon
Re-design a landing page that effectively communicates the brand

Design thinking method in mind

01

Competitive analysis

of similar landing pages was performed to explore effective styles and UX approaches. Competitive research was conducted by benchmarking 5-6 leading landing pages in this content domain. Common strengths identified included prominent data visualizations, strong information hierarchy, and bold colors for engagement.

02

Wireframing

Initial black and white wireframes were created focused on content structure and flow. Multiple directions were explored and iterated on.

03

Stakeholder Review

Selected wireframes were shared internally and provided to the CMO and Art Director for feedback to align on preferred information architecture.

04

Visual Design

The approved wireframe direction was refined visually applying brand colors, typography, and graphics.

05

Interactive Prototype

Wireframes were converted into a clickable prototype for internal testing.

06

Iteration

The prototype was refined based on feedback from the CMO and Art Director.

07

Final Design

Visually polished, responsive high fidelity pages were delivered with all elements finalized.

Initial design phase

Mobile

Desktop

POV Wireframe

Mobile

Desktop

POV Wireframe

Content layout and hierarchy to streamline the user path

High-level key takeaway information is captured first. From there, content narrows into more detailed criteria that ranges from one to three sections.

Visually refined landing pages

Color

Primary

Applied frequently to highlight actions & information

Primary colors

Secondary

Applied to highlight data in charts

Secondary colors

Background

Applied to Key Takeaways, Core Criteria 2, and a possible Core Criteria 3 sections, full width background

Background colors

Content

Applied to heading and body

Typography

Font Family

Typography

Button

Button indicates the main action. There is one primary button

button default and hover

Space

Button Spacing

Icons

Scale

55–62px, Stroke 70, .gif 800px, Infinite loop

Primary colors .gif icons

2f469c/Blue, 009d9c/Teal

Branded Icons

Header

Header image set to full width by default and imagery is determined by other teams

Brand Header

Stripes and full width image must fall behind the header title for brand consistency

Responsive experience

Thought Leadership Desktop Screens
Mobile 1 Screen
Mobile 2 Screen

Impact

Color palette icon
The value of using typography, color, and whitespace intentionally to create visual hierarchy and structure complex information. This improved comprehension and scannability.
Checklist icon
While C-level executives insights provide valuable input, it's equally vital to complement this with feedback from a diverse array of site users, ensuring a more holistic understanding of our audience's preferences and needs.
Collaboration, two people icon
How wireframing and prototyping can quickly test ideas and get stakeholder feedback prior to high-fidelity work. This allowed improving and refining the design efficiently.