Stackly’s website had become an archive of product updates rather than a coherent growth asset. New pages had been added quickly over time, and the result was a navigation model that asked too much of first-time visitors. We partnered with their team to restructure the experience around the buying journey instead of the internal org chart.
Our approach combined content strategy, UX planning, and interface design in parallel. We rewrote page narratives, simplified the information hierarchy, and introduced clearer moments of progression across the site. The visual direction leaned editorial rather than overtly technical, giving the product room to feel more premium while preserving utility.
On the interaction side, we used motion selectively to support comprehension. Reveal patterns, product callouts, and modular section rhythms helped the site feel more dynamic without competing with the message. We also created a component system that the marketing team could extend as new launches and stories emerged.
The redesign gave Stackly a website that sold more clearly and scaled more intelligently. Teams could launch new pages faster, prospects understood the value faster, and the brand finally had a digital presence that matched the quality of the product itself.