# Queue North Website Redesign Strategy # Core Problem Current website branding feels: * too abstract * too technical * too personal * too experimental The site currently resembles: * a developer portfolio * infrastructure hobby project * underground tech blog Instead of: * a mature B2B UCaaS provider * managed IT partner * enterprise communications company This creates trust friction immediately. Business buyers need confidence within seconds. --- # Business Positioning Queue North should position itself as: ## Primary Identity Reliable business communications and IT infrastructure partner for SMB and enterprise clients. ## Supporting Identity Modern, technically competent, responsive, security conscious. Not: * hacker aesthetic * underground engineering lab * mysterious tech collective --- # Recommended Brand Direction ## Desired Feel The website should feel: * modern * clean * stable * operationally mature * enterprise capable * technically sharp * trustworthy Think: * RingCentral * Zoom * Cloudflare * Cisco Meraki * Dialpad * 8x8 * Microsoft business products But less corporate and less soulless. Human but competent. --- # Homepage Structure # 1. Hero Section ## Goal Instant clarity. User should immediately understand: * what Queue North does * who it serves * why it matters ## Recommended Headline Business communications and IT that actually work. Alternative: Modern UCaaS and managed IT for businesses that cannot afford downtime. ## Supporting Text Queue North delivers cloud communications, networking, managed IT, and infrastructure support for SMBs and enterprise teams. ## CTA Buttons * Schedule Consultation * View Services Optional secondary: * Contact Support --- # 2. Trust Signals Section This section should appear immediately after hero. ## Include * uptime guarantees * support response times * certifications * vendor partnerships * years in business * client industries * deployment count * SLA metrics ## Example Metrics * 99.99% uptime * 24/7 support * multi site deployments * secure cloud infrastructure * enterprise grade failover This is critical. B2B buyers purchase risk reduction, not technology. --- # 3. Services Section ## Recommended Layout Clean enterprise card grid. ## Service Categories ### UCaaS * hosted VoIP * business phones * call routing * conferencing * remote workforce support ### Managed IT * endpoint management * helpdesk * patching * infrastructure monitoring ### Networking * SD WAN * VPN * firewall management * switching * wireless deployments ### Security * MFA * endpoint protection * backups * compliance * monitoring Each card should explain business outcomes, not technical jargon. Bad: "Kubernetes managed SIP orchestration" Good: "Reliable business communications with centralized management and failover" Humans love inventing incomprehensible wording and then wondering why sales calls disappear. --- # 4. Industry Use Cases Very important for B2B trust. ## Example Industries * healthcare * logistics * retail * manufacturing * legal * finance * distributed offices Each section should explain: * operational problems * compliance needs * uptime requirements * remote work needs --- # 5. Why Queue North ## Focus On * responsiveness * reliability * technical depth * direct support * proactive monitoring * vendor neutrality ## Avoid Generic corporate fluff like: * innovative solutions * digital transformation * next generation synergy nonsense Every B2B site writes this garbage and nobody believes any of it anymore. --- # 6. Testimonials / Case Studies Mandatory. Enterprise buyers need validation. ## Include * measurable outcomes * reduced downtime * migration success * support quality * deployment scale Even 2 or 3 strong case studies massively improve credibility. --- # 7. Support & Operations This is where technical sophistication can appear. ## Good Technical Signals * network operations center visuals * uptime dashboards * support workflows * monitoring systems * escalation paths ## Bad Technical Signals * hacker visuals * terminal cosplay * random code snippets * obscure infrastructure references Technical competence should feel controlled and operational. Not chaotic. --- # Visual Design Recommendations # Colors ## Base * white * dark slate * muted blue * graphite ## Accent * blue * teal * restrained cyan Avoid: * neon green * hacker black/red * cyberpunk palettes Those aesthetics destroy enterprise trust surprisingly fast. --- # Typography ## Recommended * Inter * Geist * IBM Plex Sans Professional sans serif. Monospace only for tiny UI accents if needed. --- # Layout Style ## Use * large spacing * strong hierarchy * clean sections * restrained motion * clear CTAs ## Avoid * excessive animations * overloaded visuals * scrolling gimmicks * terminal-first design Enterprise sites should feel efficient. --- # Recommended Technical Stack ## Best Option ### Astro or Next.js With: * Tailwind * Framer Motion lightly used * CMS integration * fast performance * accessibility focus --- # Key Messaging Shift ## Current Impression "Interesting technical person" ## Required Impression "Reliable communications and IT partner for serious businesses" That distinction changes everything about the design language.