Every major initiative has a week one. This was that week for one of our biggest projects of the year—plus steady progress on design work and ongoing client support. Here’s what we delivered.
Enterprise Migration Project Launches
Week one of a multi-month content migration project for a Fortune 500 client. We kicked off with team coordination, configured site editor permissions across 21 different web properties, and established the daily review cadence that will carry this project through to completion.
The first week of an enterprise project sets the tone. It’s when you establish communication rhythms, confirm technical approaches, and make sure everyone understands their role. We also completed initial work on the migration tool configuration, ensuring our systems can talk to theirs.
This is the kind of project where preparation matters more than speed. Week one was about getting the foundation right.
Explore our Content Operations approach →
Wireframes and Content Frames Take Shape
Our dual website project made significant design progress this week. We completed wireframe first drafts, refined them based on feedback, and delivered formal wireframe presentations to the client for both the personal brand site and the organizational site.
We also completed a content frames exercise—a collaborative process where we work with the client to understand what content goes where before we design the containers for it. And for the personal brand site, we integrated a recently published book cover into the color palette explorations, ensuring the website will feel like a natural extension of the author’s published work.
Learn more about our Complete Website Transformation service →
Security Vulnerability Investigated and Resolved
One of our enterprise clients flagged a managed vulnerability that needed investigation. We dug into the technical details, assessed the actual risk, and documented our findings. Not every flagged vulnerability is critical—but every one needs proper investigation to determine what action, if any, is required.
Security work is often invisible until something goes wrong. The goal is to keep it that way.
See how we approach User Experience Consulting →
Content Review Workflow Goes Live
For another enterprise client, we set up a workflow for their 58-month content review cycle. Yes, 58 months—nearly five years. Large organizations have content that needs periodic review on different schedules, and automating that reminder process ensures nothing slips through the cracks.
It’s a small technical win with long-term operational impact. Five years from now, the right people will get the right reminders about the right content. That’s what good systems do.
Learn more about our UX Helpdesk →
That’s the week. New projects launched, design work advanced, and operational systems put in place. If your organization is planning something big for the new year, let’s talk.
