Div Block Studio
Admirals (ex-Admiral Markets) is a leading online trading provider, offering trading with Forex and CFDs on stocks, indices, precious metals and energy.
Traditionally, Admirals created marketing and company websites by having multiple people from different departments work on different aspects of the project. This process was slow and inefficient, as it required a lot of communication and waiting for people to become available.
However, we changed this by working full-time with Admirals teams to take on all of the design and development work for marketing websites.
This not only sped up the process of website creation from months to weeks and in some cases, even days, but saved team resources to focus on more important projects.
Admirals Cards
Admirals cards is a marketing campaign website that was launched in record time to inform customers about a new debit card product and let them sign up for a waitlist to be among the first to use it.
The project features a lightning-fast 5 days build and Make integration, which sends form submissions with data to a Google Sheet. This makes it super handy for the Sales and Marketing teams to track customer interest and engage with potential customers directly.
The cards website generated a 200% more waitlist sign-ups than email marketing, making it clear that the website was a much more effective marketing channel.
Historica
Historica is an interactive world map that showcases the evolution of political borders throughout history.
Our goal was to create a SEO-optimized, scalable Webflow website that would be easy for the content team to manage.
We created website that is packed with features such as semantic development, Mailchimp integration, multiple schema markups, custom gallery slider, social sharing for articles, AI-generated graphics, CMS-driven blog filters, and more.
The project scope was a moving target, which required us to be agile and responsive. We had to be constantly communicating with stakeholders to clarify requirements and make changes as needed.
Historica was featured at the Cambridge public talks and met with positive reviews.