Designing websites that make complex information feel clear

For organizations and independent clients who need polished design, clear structure, and a website that feels clear, easy to use, and built to last.

www.therapy-service.com
services list team info brand guide page content Therapy Practice Wellness Clinic Housing Support
See the Work

The real work isn't making a site look nice.

It's taking everything a business needs to say and organizing it in a way that feels clear, intentional, and easy to move through.

I design websites for organizations, service-based brands, and businesses that have a lot to communicate. Wix is the platform I know best, but I am comfortable learning new systems and using the tools that make the most sense for the project. What matters most to me is making information feel clear, clean, and easy to manage over time.

What I do well

What I bring to a website project, from early planning to final handoff.

Content structure

I take scattered messaging, overlapping services, and too much information in too many places, then shape it into something that feels easier to follow and easier to maintain.

Brand-consistent design

Layouts that feel aligned with the brand, not like a template with a logo swapped in. I design for tone, trust, and visual consistency across the full experience.

Adaptable platform experience

Wix is the platform I have the most experience with, but I am not limited to one system. I pick up new platforms quickly and have also worked with tools like Tailwind CSS, Bootstrap, Visual Studio Code, and Vercel. I learn by doing, and I am always open to better tools and better ways of building.

Visual clarity

Strong hierarchy, intentional white space, and layouts designed to guide the eye without overwhelming it. The goal is to make content feel approachable, not crowded.

Operational thinking

I think beyond launch. What happens when content grows, priorities shift, or someone on the team needs to make an update? I build with cleaner hierarchies, reusable sections, and handoffs that support real-world maintenance.

Selected website work

Three sites I designed and built, each with different audiences, goals, and content needs.

Resource-Ability

resource-ability.com

Resource-Ability needed a website that clearly communicated a complex set of support services to families navigating the regional center system. The challenge was not the visual design; it was making layered, nuanced information feel approachable rather than overwhelming. I focused on page flow, service clarity, and language that builds trust with an audience that may be unfamiliar with the process.

Service structure Audience clarity Trust-building design Bilingual content support

Real Therapy

realtherapy.net

For Real Therapy, warmth and credibility had to coexist. A therapy practice site can easily tip toward sterile or vague, so I focused on making it welcoming without losing structure. I built the full site in Wix with a CMS-driven blog and resource section, and delivered how-to video guides so the team could manage ongoing updates without needing to contact a designer.

CMS setup Client handoff guides Supportive visual tone Service page structure

Coastal Wellness

coastalwellness.clinic

This project needed to feel premium without being inaccessible: a wellness brand with membership tiers and treatment menus. I approached it with a focus on clean layout and service organization, making sure the visual tone felt upscale but the experience felt easy to move through for a customer exploring options or managing a membership.

Membership tiers Service organization Elevated visual direction

I've also contributed to website projects across different platforms through page restructuring, content cleanup, service organization, and ongoing support. A lot of the time, the work does not end at launch. Websites grow, shift, and need regular attention to stay clear and current.

How a website comes together

Every project is different, but the general process usually stays pretty consistent.

1

Understand the brand

Who the site is for, what it needs to communicate, and where the current friction lives before design decisions start getting made.

2

Sort the structure

Page hierarchy, content flow, and information architecture. The structure needs to make sense before the design can fully do its job.

3

Design with intention

Layouts that reflect the brand's tone and guide the visitor clearly, not just visually appealing but purposefully organized. Form follows function, and both matter.

4

Build for real use

Future edits, team handoffs, and content growth all matter. I think about what happens after launch, not just what looks good at delivery.

Working on something that needs structure?

I work with organizations, service-based brands, and independent clients who want a website that feels polished, clear, and built around what they actually need.

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