We just launched a new version of our website!
We think the new design will make our content easier to navigate, so that readers have an easier time learning about our work and our thinking.
As part of the launch, we’ve updated language on a number of core pages to better reflect how our work has evolved in the years since our previous website was created.
This includes updates to our mission statement, which had been in place since our incubation as a project of GiveWell. The new statement is more concise, and we think it better reflects the breadth of our work:
“Our mission is to help others as much as we can with the resources available to us.”
Other updates include:
- The ability to sort and filter much of our published content, including blog posts, research reports, and notable lessons.
- Statistics on our giving in each of our focus areas.
- A new page explaining the difference between our two grantmaking portfolios (Global Health & Wellbeing and Longtermism).
- Pages for our newest focus areas, South Asian Air Quality and Global Aid Policy.
If you experience any issues using the new site, or see something you think should be changed, we would appreciate your feedback. Contact webrequests@openphilanthropy.org (or comment on this post) to get in touch.
TL;DR I spent more time looking over the website (particularly on mobile) and I think I’m mostly wrong/bad in my comment above. There might still be some value in a redo, and I guess it is 30% likely to be valuable.
I am not a web designer, but I’ve interacted with several in the past. I guess my comments below are about “50% true”.
Why I changed my mind from my message above:
Why I think there could be a redo:
In some sense, Open Phil is a major expression of the heart and machinery of EA. So having a highly polished page that is highly professional is valuable.
I think some viewers of the site, will be really picky, especially newcomers and some kinds of talent (experienced professors). They might be judgmental and take on impressions, even if they can’t consciously articulate it.