I’m a designer coming from the for-profit space, in which companies invest heavily in design and marketing. The role of design–particularly skilled, quality design–has grown in the last, say, decade, due to growing evidence in its ROI. For instance, for myself and friends of mine who specialize in web design, a website’s conversion rate will jump 10%–25% from a redesign (typically a more out-of-the-box or low-skill solution, redesigned to a customized and professional solution). Name any successful tech company–Stripe, Slack, Github–they have invested tens to even hundreds of thousands on their marketing website. Many others invest similar amounts in logos and branding.
The EA world has not picked up on this very important “secret” of the for-profit world, and there’s no clear reason why. After all, EA organizations have just as much an incentive to inspire, persuade, and communicate to their audience as do for-profit companies. When I, for instance, look at an amazing for-profit company websites, I:
- Feel a sense of trust–this organization has it together
- Understand quickly what the organization does, why it’s important, and why they are amazing at it–I’m more sold
- If the topic is inspirational, I feel inspired and called to action
- Leave with a more memorable impression of this organization
When I look at even the best EA websites, I don’t feel particularly inspired, nor do I quickly understand what the organization does and why it’s important, nor do I leave with a memorable impression, and so on. And really, these should be the most inspiring websites in the world! Our bar should, if anything, be even higher than non-profits–our work is as important as it gets, isn’t it? If I was a billionaire thinking of getting into Effective Altruism, for example, and taking the first step by looking at an organization’s (or a few organizations’) website(s), I would definitely want to feel more inspired (plus other aforementioned things).
TLDR: I got into marketing and design ten years ago because I believe it is very important for an organization’s success (in whatever terms that means)! I’ve been pleased to see the for-profit world more and more learn of and integrate the power of design. I am a bit saddened that the EA world–the place where the most important things are happening–haven’t yet learned this.
I like the argument of “people who have skin in the game decide to spend money on this” plus “I observed conversion rates increasing”
I assume most EA websites don’t care about conversion so much, especially not the extra-20% that would be deterred by design.
I do totally agree that EA-websites that care about conversion (like GWWC, 80k, or other intros-to-EA) should care about their design
I don’t think individual orgs that happen to have a website should care much (they’re not trying to convert anyone). Like rethink priorities, or open phil
I don’t think the forum should care much about conversion, but I’m pretty unsure here so I’m giving it a separate point
What do you think? I sort of predict I’m going to learn even more from your answer, but I’m not sure what
Quick preface: I am not completely certain on how important design is for EA organizations, so these comments are an exploratory process of figuring this out, and there are definitely some knowledge gaps to fill.
Re conversions: Immediate conversions may not always be important for EA organizations, at least not to the extent they are for most for-profit organizations. The most important part about mentioning conversions is just demonstrating the power of design.
On that topic, re: websites like Open Phil:
Quick preface: I would need to understand more about the organization’s user base and goals to give the best answer here about how design could help them achieve those goals
However, if an organization is trying to influence anyone’s behavior ever, I would argue that good design at least matters–How much it matters is dependent on a few things, such as how large their user base is, and what other channels they could use to communicate or influence anyone’s behavior
The fact that Open Phil has clearly put more than 0$ into their current website means they also believe it matters, to some extent
The real question to ask then is, is a design that is [this] much better worth [this] amount of money (I concede that the answer might be no in some cases)
It’s also worth thinking about the EA movement as a whole. If every single EA website was brilliantly communicated, inspiring, emotionally impactful, highly (and easily) informative, memorable, convey a sense of trust and professionalism… I believe it would do the movement a tremendous amount of good. In a sense, the movement as a whole wants to increase its conversion rates, right?
Quick guess, for fun: Spending 1% of EA funds on design for the next 10 years would increase the total amount donated to EA itself by 20% (using the average conversion rates from above)
[I just want to say explicitly that I am making up things and I don’t actually know what’s important for those orgs. I’m more trying-to-learn-by-disagreeing than think-I-know-something]
Actually, this is something I’ve been meaning to look into more deeply. I’m going to look up some research and stuff, and then I will come back to you 🙂
Whatever’s lowest effort for you. A comment here maybe?
Here’s, so here’s my initial pitch:
I’m a designer coming from the for-profit space, in which companies invest heavily in design and marketing. The role of design–particularly skilled, quality design–has grown in the last, say, decade, due to growing evidence in its ROI. For instance, for myself and friends of mine who specialize in web design, a website’s conversion rate will jump 10%–25% from a redesign (typically a more out-of-the-box or low-skill solution, redesigned to a customized and professional solution). Name any successful tech company–Stripe, Slack, Github–they have invested tens to even hundreds of thousands on their marketing website. Many others invest similar amounts in logos and branding.
The EA world has not picked up on this very important “secret” of the for-profit world, and there’s no clear reason why. After all, EA organizations have just as much an incentive to inspire, persuade, and communicate to their audience as do for-profit companies. When I, for instance, look at an amazing for-profit company websites, I:
- Feel a sense of trust–this organization has it together
- Understand quickly what the organization does, why it’s important, and why they are amazing at it–I’m more sold
- If the topic is inspirational, I feel inspired and called to action
- Leave with a more memorable impression of this organization
When I look at even the best EA websites, I don’t feel particularly inspired, nor do I quickly understand what the organization does and why it’s important, nor do I leave with a memorable impression, and so on. And really, these should be the most inspiring websites in the world! Our bar should, if anything, be even higher than non-profits–our work is as important as it gets, isn’t it? If I was a billionaire thinking of getting into Effective Altruism, for example, and taking the first step by looking at an organization’s (or a few organizations’) website(s), I would definitely want to feel more inspired (plus other aforementioned things).
TLDR: I got into marketing and design ten years ago because I believe it is very important for an organization’s success (in whatever terms that means)! I’ve been pleased to see the for-profit world more and more learn of and integrate the power of design. I am a bit saddened that the EA world–the place where the most important things are happening–haven’t yet learned this.
@JP Addison , any chance you know an EA org that could use design help? (including CEA maybe?)
(wow, so fun to tag people! I love this feature :) )
Interesting!
I like the argument of “people who have skin in the game decide to spend money on this” plus “I observed conversion rates increasing”
I assume most EA websites don’t care about conversion so much, especially not the extra-20% that would be deterred by design.
I do totally agree that EA-websites that care about conversion (like GWWC, 80k, or other intros-to-EA) should care about their design
I don’t think individual orgs that happen to have a website should care much (they’re not trying to convert anyone). Like rethink priorities, or open phil
I don’t think the forum should care much about conversion, but I’m pretty unsure here so I’m giving it a separate point
What do you think? I sort of predict I’m going to learn even more from your answer, but I’m not sure what
Quick preface: I am not completely certain on how important design is for EA organizations, so these comments are an exploratory process of figuring this out, and there are definitely some knowledge gaps to fill.
Re conversions: Immediate conversions may not always be important for EA organizations, at least not to the extent they are for most for-profit organizations. The most important part about mentioning conversions is just demonstrating the power of design.
On that topic, re: websites like Open Phil:
Quick preface: I would need to understand more about the organization’s user base and goals to give the best answer here about how design could help them achieve those goals
However, if an organization is trying to influence anyone’s behavior ever, I would argue that good design at least matters–How much it matters is dependent on a few things, such as how large their user base is, and what other channels they could use to communicate or influence anyone’s behavior
The fact that Open Phil has clearly put more than 0$ into their current website means they also believe it matters, to some extent
The real question to ask then is, is a design that is [this] much better worth [this] amount of money (I concede that the answer might be no in some cases)
It’s also worth thinking about the EA movement as a whole. If every single EA website was brilliantly communicated, inspiring, emotionally impactful, highly (and easily) informative, memorable, convey a sense of trust and professionalism… I believe it would do the movement a tremendous amount of good. In a sense, the movement as a whole wants to increase its conversion rates, right?
Quick guess, for fun: Spending 1% of EA funds on design for the next 10 years would increase the total amount donated to EA itself by 20% (using the average conversion rates from above)
[I just want to say explicitly that I am making up things and I don’t actually know what’s important for those orgs. I’m more trying-to-learn-by-disagreeing than think-I-know-something]
Yep it’s been a good exercise and something I will now question with more scrutiny :)
Actually, this is something I’ve been meaning to look into more deeply. I’m going to look up some research and stuff, and then I will come back to you 🙂