Tools and solutions for EU public sector institutions
An animal shelter website should help people adopt, donate and get in touch without confusion. We design practical, accessible websites that present animals clearly, explain adoption requirements, support multilingual communication and meet GDPR and public sector expectations.
When animals are shown mainly through social platforms, older posts are quickly buried and important details become inconsistent. Potential adopters cannot easily compare animals, revisit profiles or share a reliable link with family members.
If the process is unclear, people hesitate. Questions about forms, home checks, fees, contracts, trial periods or collection arrangements often lead to repeated enquiries and delayed decisions.
People may want to donate money, provide food, foster animals or volunteer their time, but they need clear instructions. If support options are spread across different posts or documents, many will give up before taking action.
Poor mobile layouts, weak contrast, unclear buttons and missing image descriptions create barriers. This affects people trying to adopt, donate or contact the shelter, including users relying on assistive technology.
We create clear animal profile pages with filters such as species, age, size, temperament and home suitability. Each profile can include photos, health notes, adoption status and a direct enquiry route.
We present the adoption journey step by step, including eligibility criteria, required documents, visits, contracts, fees where relevant and what to expect after adoption. This helps set realistic expectations before someone applies.
We organise support options into clear pages for donations, supplies, fostering, volunteering and partnership opportunities. Each option explains what is needed, how to help and who to contact.
We design pages with clear headings, readable contrast, keyboard-friendly navigation, descriptive image text and straightforward calls to action. This supports accessibility compliance and makes key tasks easier on any device.
We help shelters keep animal profiles, notices, campaigns and practical information current. Support can include routine updates, content reviews, accessibility checks and clear reporting on completed work.
Yes. Social media is useful for reach, but a website provides a stable, searchable source of information that people can return to at any time. It also gives you more control over accessibility, structured content, privacy information and adoption enquiries.
Each profile should include a clear summary, recent photos, health and vaccination information where appropriate, temperament, home suitability and current adoption status. It should also explain the next step, such as submitting an enquiry or speaking to the shelter team.
We build pages with accessible structure, readable contrast, keyboard navigation and descriptive text for images and actions. We also review key user journeys such as viewing animal profiles, making contact and finding donation information so barriers are identified early.
Either the shelter or the founder must manage it. Invoices for the domain and hosting should be issued by the direct supplier.