
Bluepine Health is a network of specialized medical clinics. They had a team of world-class doctors and a marketing budget to match. They were spending five figures a month on digital ads, driving thousands of visitors to their website. The only problem? The website wasn’t working.
It was a classic case of a leaky bucket. The site was difficult to navigate, the appointment booking process was a multi-step nightmare, and the content was a confusing mix of medical jargon and corporate platitudes. They were pouring water into a bucket full of holes.
Our job wasn't to design a "prettier" website. It was to build a website that actually worked. A tool that could effectively convert expensive ad traffic into actual patients.
Here’s what we did:
One Page, One Job. We redesigned every page with a single, clear purpose. The "Our Doctors" page was for introducing the team. The "Services" page was for explaining what they do. The "Contact" page was for booking an appointment. Nothing else. We were ruthless about removing anything that didn't serve the page's primary goal.
The "Two-Click" Booking Rule. We rebuilt the appointment process from the ground up. Our rule was simple: from any page on the site, a visitor should be no more than two clicks away from booking an appointment. This meant a persistent "Book Now" button in the header and a simplified, single-page booking form.
Content Triage. We went through every sentence on the site and asked one question: "Does a potential patient really need to know this?" If the answer was no, we cut it. This reduced the site's total word count by more than half and made the information that remained far more impactful.
Three months after the new site launched, Bluepine's conversion rate had tripled. They were getting three times as many appointments from the same amount of traffic. They didn't need a bigger marketing budget; they needed a better bucket.
This is the core of our philosophy. A beautiful website is nice. An expensive ad campaign can feel productive. But none of it matters if the fundamental tool—the website itself—isn't built to do its job.




