Your Nonprofit Website Should Be More Than a Brochure

Silhouette of a person looking at a smartphone beside the headline “Who Is Your Website Really For?”

There is a version of a nonprofit website that looks good in a board presentation, passes a basic checklist, and is quietly forgotten by the audience it was supposed to serve. It launches with fanfare, gets a few compliments on the new design, and then slowly stops doing the thing it was built to do. Staff struggle to update it. Visitors cannot find what they need. The community the organization exists to serve moves on.

This happens more often than it should. And almost every time, the root cause is the same: the project was scoped around what the organization could justify spending rather than what the audience actually needed.

That is a quiet but significant distinction. And closing that gap is what separates a website that checks boxes from one that genuinely serves people.

The Checklist Trap

Most nonprofit website projects begin with a list of deliverables: a new design, updated content, mobile responsiveness, maybe an accessibility audit. These are reasonable starting points. But they describe what a website looks like, not what it does.

A checklist approach treats the website as a finished product. A community-centered approach treats it as a tool. The difference shows up in every decision along the way: how the navigation is structured, how content is organized, what actions the site makes easy, and whose experience was actually considered when the design was being built.

When scope gets compressed to fit a predetermined budget, the checklist items usually survive. They are visible and easy to defend. What gets cut is almost always the harder, less tangible work: genuine discovery with the audiences the site will serve, content strategy that reflects how real people seek help, accessibility built in rather than layered on, and the kind of user experience thinking that asks whether someone in a difficult situation can actually find what they need at 11pm on a phone with a slow connection.

“For a mission-driven organization, those things are not extras. They are the point.”

What a Website Can Actually Do for the People You Serve

A well-built nonprofit website is not a marketing asset. It is a community resource. And for many of the people your organization serves, it may be one of the most accessible points of contact you have.

Think about what that means in practice. A parent searching for services at midnight. A first-generation college student trying to understand an application process. Someone navigating a housing crisis who needs information in plain language, quickly, on a phone with limited data. A community member with a disability who needs a site that works with their assistive technology, not against it.

For these users, a website that is technically functional but hard to navigate is not a minor inconvenience. It is a barrier. It sends the message, unintentionally but clearly, that the organization was not thinking about them when the site was built.

A website built with genuine care for its audience can do the opposite. It can make a complex system feel navigable. It can connect someone to exactly the resource they need without requiring them to understand how the organization is structured internally. It can be the reason someone reaches out instead of giving up. That is not an abstract idea. It is a measurable outcome that organizations with audience-first websites see again and again.

Why Scope and Budget Fall Out of Alignment

It is worth being honest about why this happens, because it is rarely the result of bad intentions. Nonprofit organizations operate under real resource constraints. Leadership is accountable for every dollar spent. A website project is one competing priority among many, and it is much easier to justify a project that looks contained than one that requires a harder conversation about what the organization actually needs.

So the budget gets set first, and then the scope adjusts to fit. Vendors who want the work agree to deliver within those constraints. Everyone moves forward in good faith. The problem is that the audience, the actual community the site is supposed to serve, was never part of that negotiation. Their needs do not shrink because the project scope did.

The result is a pattern that many organizations recognize: a new website that launches well and underperforms within 18 months. Not because it was built poorly, but because it was never built around the right question. The right question is not “what can we afford?” It is “what does this website need to do, and for whom?”

Once that question is answered honestly, the scope becomes clearer. And a scope built around real audience needs is one that a good partner can help prioritize, phase, and plan for within organizational realities, without cutting the things that matter most.

Starting With Audience, Not Assumptions

The organizations that build websites people actually use share a common starting point: they spend time understanding their audiences before they spend time on design. Not assumed audiences, not the audiences described in a five-year-old strategic plan, but the actual people who will use the site, what they are looking for, where they get confused, and what would make the experience genuinely easier.

That work changes everything downstream. Navigation gets built around what people are trying to do, not around department names. Content gets written at the right reading level for the actual audience. Forms get simplified. Pathways get shortened. Accessibility stops being a compliance checkbox and becomes a design principle, because the team has spent time thinking about who is actually on the other end of the screen.

At ArcStone, we have spent 28 years building websites for mission-driven organizations. Our Blueprint discovery process exists because we learned early that the most expensive mistake in website development is skipping the thinking and going straight to the building. When we understand who a site needs to serve and how, every subsequent decision gets easier, faster, and more likely to hold up over time.

We are also direct with organizations about what their audiences actually need from a digital experience. Sometimes that conversation is easy. Sometimes it surfaces a gap between what the organization thought it was building and what the community it serves actually requires. That gap is worth knowing about before the project starts, not after.

Great Websites for great nonprofits - See Our Work.

The Question That Changes the Conversation

If your organization is approaching a website project, there is one question worth putting at the center of every early conversation, before the vendor is selected, before the scope is written, and before the budget is finalized:

Who is this website for, and what do they need it to do?

If that question can be answered specifically, with real people and real scenarios in mind, it will shape every decision that follows. It will surface the scope that actually matters. It will make clear what cannot be cut. And it will give your team a way to evaluate proposals, designs, and finished work that goes beyond whether it looks good or checks a box.

A nonprofit website built around that question is not just a better website. It is a more honest expression of what your organization stands for. The community you serve deserves a digital experience that was designed with them in mind. Building that experience is not a stretch goal. It is the work.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from nonprofit leaders and communications staff planning a website project.

A nonprofit website should function as a community resource, not just a marketing asset. For many of the people an organization serves, the website is the most accessible point of contact available. It should make complex systems feel navigable, connect people to the right resources without requiring them to understand how the organization is internally structured, and be usable by people with disabilities, people on mobile devices, and people with limited digital literacy. A well-built nonprofit website can meaningfully reduce barriers to services, increase program participation, and build community trust in ways that a brochure-style site simply cannot.

The most common reason is that the project was scoped around what an organization could justify spending rather than what their community actually needs. When budget is set before scope is understood, what gets cut is almost always the hardest to see: genuine user research, content strategy built around real audience behavior, accessibility designed in from the start, and information architecture built around how people seek help rather than how the organization is structured internally. The visible checklist items survive. The audience-centered thinking does not.

A website that looks good passes a visual checklist: modern design, updated branding, mobile layout. A website that actually works is built around what specific people are trying to accomplish when they visit. The navigation reflects how users think about their needs, not how the organization thinks about its departments. Content is written at the right reading level for the actual audience. Pathways to services are short and clear. Accessibility is built in, not checked at launch. The difference shows up most clearly 12 to 18 months after launch, when a site that looked great starts to underperform because it was never designed around real users.

The most important thing a nonprofit can do before starting a website redesign is answer one question honestly: who is this website for, and what do they need it to do? That question should be answered with real audience research, not internal assumptions. From there, a good partner will help scope the project around those audience needs, prioritize what matters most, and build a phased plan that fits organizational resources without cutting the things that determine whether the site actually serves people. Discovery before design is not a luxury. It is what separates a site that lasts from one that needs to be rebuilt in three years.

WCAG stands for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, the internationally recognized standard for making websites usable by people with disabilities. For nonprofits, accessibility is both a legal responsibility and a mission imperative. If your organization serves people with visual, cognitive, or motor disabilities and your website does not work with their assistive technology, you are creating a barrier to your own services. WCAG 2.1 Level AA is the most widely required standard and covers color contrast, screen reader compatibility, keyboard navigation, and image alt text, among many other criteria. Accessibility built in from the start of a project costs significantly less than accessibility retrofitted after launch.

WordPress is the most widely used content management system for nonprofits for good reason. It offers a large ecosystem of tools, a massive developer community, and content editing interfaces that non-technical staff can use without outside help every time a page needs to be updated. It scales well from small community organizations to large national nonprofits. The most important factor in choosing a CMS is not which platform is technically superior in the abstract but which one your team can actually maintain after the agency relationship ends. A site built on a platform your staff can manage independently is more valuable than a technically sophisticated site that requires outside help for every content update.

A nonprofit website redesign done well typically takes four to eight months from project kickoff to launch, depending on organizational complexity, content volume, the number of integrations required, and how quickly the client team can review and approve work. Projects that rush this timeline almost always sacrifice the discovery and strategy work that determines whether the site serves its audiences. A launch date should be driven by what the project actually requires. That said, a phased approach can get a strong foundation live earlier while additional features are built out over time, which often works well for organizations with firm external deadlines.

The clearest signal that a nonprofit website is working is that people can find what they need and take action without friction. Quantitatively, look at bounce rate by page, time on task for key user journeys, mobile conversion rates, and search rankings for terms your audiences actually use. Qualitatively, ask the people your organization serves to show you how they would find a specific program or resource on your site. What you observe in that process tells you more than any analytics dashboard. If your staff regularly receive calls or emails asking for information that is already on the website, the site is not working for your audience.

Beyond portfolio and pricing, the most useful questions are about process. Ask how they conduct discovery and whether audience research is part of it. Ask how they approach accessibility and at what point in the project it is addressed. Ask who owns the site after launch and what staff training is included. Ask for examples of work for organizations with similar audiences or complexity. Ask what happens when scope changes during the project. A good agency will have clear, specific answers to all of these. Vague answers about process are a reliable signal that the work will be vague as well.

A Blueprint discovery process is a structured planning phase that happens before any design or development begins. It typically includes stakeholder interviews, audience research, content audits, technical assessments, and information architecture planning. The goal is to align the entire project team on who the site serves, what those people need, and how the site will be structured to meet those needs. ArcStone’s Blueprint methodology exists because 28 years of experience has shown that projects built on a thorough strategic foundation are significantly more likely to serve their audiences well and hold up over time. Skipping discovery to save time or money almost always creates more expensive problems later.

Ready to build something that actually serves your community?

ArcStone has partnered with mission-driven organizations for 28 years. We start every project by understanding who a site needs to serve, and we build from there. If you are planning a website project and want an honest conversation about what it should actually do, we would be glad to talk.

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