One segment. Three sendable angles.
This is still speculative segment proof, not a claimed client case study. The point is to compare how the same business type reads when the proof and CTA emphasis change.
Specialist firms or focused boutiques that want sharper positioning instead of a broad full-service impression.
Less imposing than the authority version. Stronger on clarity than on prestige signalling.
Use this when the pitch is 'let's make the site explain your niche clearly enough that the right client knows they're in the right place.'
The segment architecture stays recognizable.
These directions are not random redesigns. They sit on the same segment logic, then change the emphasis at the hero, proof, and CTA layers.
Lead with a precise practice signal.
The homepage should make the firm feel legible immediately: who the work is for, what kind of matters are handled, and why the team is qualified to be trusted.
- Single practice statement instead of broad service soup
- Jurisdiction, office locations, and seniority cues visible early
- Quiet visual tone with typography doing the work
Turn the homepage into a routing surface for real legal intent.
Visitors rarely land on a law-firm homepage as a first step. This page needs to route quickly into the right matter area while keeping the firm coherent.
- Dedicated landing pages per practice area
- Profile pages with credentials and publication trails
- Case-style proof without breaching confidentiality
Close with professionalism, not pressure.
The contact experience should feel appropriate to the context. That means clear consultation posture, realistic expectations, and documentation links where required.
- Consultation request or direct call path
- No chat widgets or conversion gimmicks
- Impressum, privacy, and professional notices handled visibly
What still has to hold across every version.
Practice-area landing pages — each Praxisbereich gets its own URL because that's how clients arrive via search.
Lawyer profiles with credentials, recent matters (NDA-respecting), publications. Trust is built on detail.
First-contact funnel that respects legal etiquette: schedule a 30-min consultation, no chatbots, no pop-ups.
Homepage, practice-area grid, attorney profiles, publications, and clean contact flow.
Deeper content architecture, multilingual structure, writing support, and stronger publication system.
Publication uploads, profile updates, hiring pages, and light SEO maintenance.
Want this version tuned to a real business?
Legal is a good proof surface because it exposes whether the studio can signal seriousness through layout and copy discipline instead of decoration alone.
Compare the other two directions.
Use these when the segment is right but the current hero posture or proof emphasis is not the strongest fit for the prospect.
The most classic legal variant. It is built for firms that need to feel established, rigorous, and discreet before the user decides to make first contact.
The most action-oriented legal variant. It keeps legal seriousness but pushes first-contact clarity harder for employment, dispute, or time-sensitive commercial matters.
Other top verticals.
Keep the cross-vertical compare surface close by. The right move is not always to send the most polished page, but the one that matches the buyer motion cleanest.
Local restaurant demo
Launch-site brief
Fitness studio demo
Trial-class brief
Maschinenbau B2B demo
RFQ brief
B2B SaaS demo
Pricing / trial brief
TGA / building systems engineering demo
Planning or tender brief
Real estate / immobilien demo
Viewing / seller brief
Boutique hotel / hospitality demo
Direct-booking brief
Healthcare / clinic demo
Appointment / clinic brief
Physio practice audit demo
Appointment-routing brief