Homepage Direction Preview · Internal Review

Two directions for your review — plus a third for warm-share moments.

The team built five meaningfully-different homepage approaches and reviewed them through three lenses (visual quality, voice integrity, audience reaction). What follows is the recommended pair, framed by one strategic question for our next conversation.

For: Rabbi Yehuda Goldenberg
Prepared: 2026-04-28
Project: Virtual Chaburah Phase 1

The two we recommend showing first

Different in voice, audience, and visual register. Both honor the brief; each makes a different case.

Or browse all five in side-by-side compare view →

The question we need to answer together

B and A both work. They speak to different readers in different voices. When two directions both stand up, the choice between them is rarely about craft — it’s about whose eyes you want the homepage to address first.

  • If B is right: the page is for everyone arriving — bochurim, parents, rabbeim, donors. The trade-off is no audience is sharply addressed; the page is a warm welcome rather than a pointed argument.
  • If A is right: the page speaks to the bochur first and lets the rest of the audience read over his shoulder. The trade-off is parents and donors get a less direct welcome — we’d link them to dedicated pages downstream.
  • If both are right: we ship B as the homepage and A as a sister page (a “for the bochur” share lander) with a quiet link from one to the other. This is a real option.

One more, for warm-share moments.

A short editorial page that travels well in WhatsApp and email forwards. Not a primary homepage — a complement.

E

Still a Talmid.

Companion / share lander
Direction E homepage at desktop width — full-bleed candle photograph, three-word headline 'Still a Talmid.' in oversized italic serif, single primary call to action, magazine-cover composition.

Voice

Editorial, cinematic, deliberately minimal. Three words carry the page. The kind of layout that holds up as a screenshot in a forwarded message.

Speaks to

Anyone who lands here through a friend’s share. It is not built to convert — it is built to make the next click feel inevitable. The longer pages (B or A) carry the operational weight.

Why we’d include it

Because most people who hear about the program will hear about it from someone they trust forwarding a link. Whatever that link looks like is doing the introduction work. Still a Talmid. is what we’d want them to see.

Open E at full size

Also built — available if you’d like to see them.

Two more directions exist. We’re not leading with them in this conversation, but each owns a specific angle that may be useful as a sub-page off the chosen primary.

Direction C homepage at desktop width — parent-direct headline 'For Your Son. A Chaburah That Knows His Name.', warm sefer-and-glasses hero image, dual CTA cards with built-in stamps.

C — For Your Son.

Parent-decision-maker direction with an 8-question Family FAQ as its spine. Excellent at converting parents; explicitly excludes the bochur-as-reader. Best as a /families sub-page off B or A rather than a primary.

Open C →
Direction D homepage at desktop width — SaaS-clean layout, four CSS tablet mockups showing a live chaburah session with five named bochurim, dark navigation, tech-comfortable register.

D — Live on Your Tablet.

Product-demo register with four tablet mockups and a stat-pill hero. Best repurposed as a /the-tablet deep-dive page linked from B or A. The mockups are too useful to lose; the SaaS register is the wrong front door.

Open D →

What we need from you to move forward

Three short answers unblock the next phase. We can take all of these on a 30-minute call, or by reply — whichever is easier.

  1. Direction. Between B (general welcome) and A (bochur-direct), which voice sounds like yours? Or do you want both, with B as homepage and A as a companion?
  2. Endorsements. Three rabbinical haskamos — names, quoted text (50–80 words each), and explicit permission to display publicly.
  3. Phone number. The number we should publish on the live site, and who answers it. Hours, too, if there’s a window.