Tools and solutions for EU public sector institutions
Museum websites need to do more than present collections. They should help people understand exhibitions, plan visits, book activities, and access practical information in formats that meet accessibility, GDPR, multilingual, and public sector compliance requirements.
Exhibition pages often rely on short promotional text or images without enough context. Visitors cannot easily tell what is on display, who it is for, or why it is relevant before deciding to visit.
Opening times, ticketing rules, location details, accessibility information, and visitor guidance are often spread across multiple pages or documents. This makes visits harder to plan and increases routine enquiries to staff.
Museum information may be difficult to use with assistive technologies, on mobile devices, or in more than one language. This creates barriers for residents, tourists, schools, and visitors with specific access requirements.
Educational sessions, guided tours, and public events are often managed through email or phone calls. This slows down administration, makes capacity harder to track, and gives visitors an inconsistent booking experience.
We create clear exhibition pages with curatorial context, dates, audience information, highlights, and supporting media. Content is organised so visitors can quickly understand what is currently available and what may be relevant to them.
We bring together opening hours, admission details, directions, facilities, accessibility arrangements, and visitor guidance in a clear structure. This helps museums present operational information consistently and reduce avoidable confusion.
We design booking journeys for workshops, school visits, guided tours, and public events, with capacity handling and clear confirmation steps. Personal data collection is kept proportionate and aligned with GDPR requirements.
We build museum platforms to support accessible navigation, readable content structures, keyboard use, and compatibility with assistive technologies. Where needed, we also support multilingual content models so institutions can serve local and international audiences more effectively.
We provide ongoing support for content governance, technical maintenance, accessibility reviews, and documented updates. This gives public institutions a platform that remains dependable and easier to manage over time.
Visitors often decide whether to attend based on what they can understand in advance. Clear exhibition pages help them assess relevance, plan their time, and arrive with better expectations.
Opening hours, admission arrangements, location, accessibility details, facilities, and booking information should be easy to find. If this information is fragmented, staff usually receive more avoidable calls and emails.
Accessibility affects whether people can read content, navigate pages, complete bookings, and use the site on different devices or with assistive technology. For public institutions, it should be treated as a core service requirement rather than an optional enhancement.
The museum. The domain and hosting must belong to the institution, and invoices should be issued by the direct service provider.