Software development, spelled out.
A website redesign for Xplicity — a Dutch–Lithuanian software company whose old site undersold the team behind it. One visual system, eight templates, a custom work-model component.
A real software team, hidden behind a generic site.
The old site was all stock photos, a flat layout, and copy that read like every other dev shop. Prospects couldn’t tell what made them different before they left.
One palette, one typeface, one button set.
The whole site runs on a small, strict system, so every page reads as one product. Here it is, rebuilt in the browser instead of shown as a flat screenshot.
Colour
Type — Montserrat
Buttons
Eight templates, one map.
I mapped the whole site before designing a screen: Home, Services, Portfolio, Academy, News & Blog, Career, and Contact, each with its own detail pages and forms. The Academy — Xplicity’s free two-week course for IT students — finally got the space it earned, not a buried link.
The work model, rebuilt as a component.
Xplicity sells on partnership, so the Services page had to show how they actually work — a five-stage cycle that loops from preparation back into maintenance. I recreated it here, live, in the brand colours.
Eight templates, one consistent site.
Homepage, services, the Academy, news, careers, contact — every template runs on the same system, so the whole site reads as one place. A few of the pages, live:
After launch