How NGOs Can Use Tech Better
Most NGOs don’t need “more tech”. They need better decisions: a website that feels trustworthy, content that answers real questions, and workflows that reduce manual effort for teams that are already stretched.
1) Design for low bandwidth
Assume your visitors are on mid-range Android phones with patchy data. Keep pages light, reduce heavy scripts, and ship optimized images (WebP + responsive sizes). If your page feels instant, trust goes up.
2) Accessibility builds trust
Semantic structure, readable contrast, and keyboard-friendly UI makes your site clearer for everyone. Accessibility isn’t just “compliance” — it’s how you look professional and reliable.
3) Clarity converts
Your site should answer: What do you do? Why does it matter? What should I do next? Donate and volunteer paths should be obvious and frictionless (no confusing forms, no hidden CTAs).
4) Measure what matters
Track a few things: page speed, form submissions, donation clicks, and top landing pages. A simple monthly review beats complicated dashboards that no one maintains.
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