Unifying a product story under pressure

Role: Experience Strategy Lead & Creative Director at Glantz

Scope: B2B Healthcare SaaS → website launch and platform narrative

Stakeholders: CEO, CMO, CPO, Sales, Content, Design

Helped a divided leadership team align on what their platform stood for, then built the experience to prove it.

Impact at a Glance

  • 115% conversion increase

    Website overhaul drove measurable pipeline growth for Verato's enterprise launch

  • 2.3X pipeline growth

    Unified product narrative converted skeptical healthcare enterprise buyers

  • 6-week delivery

    Full experience strategy and creative direction executed in weekly agile sprints

  • C-suite alignment

    Five competing stakeholder groups aligned on one product story before design began

The Problem

Verato had a strong product and a real market position. What they didn't have was a shared story about what to lead with.

Verato was entering a crowded healthcare data market at a moment when buyers were consolidating vendors and scrutinizing new entrants carefully. Getting the launch story wrong wasn't just a marketing risk. It was a sales risk.

Each leadership group had a different answer. The CMO wanted to lead with industry authority. The CPO wanted to lead with product capability. Sales wanted proof points. With a firm launch deadline and no center of gravity, the website couldn't do its job: convert skeptical enterprise buyers across healthcare systems, insurance firms, and hospitals.

What was at risk:

  • Leadership teams were optimizing for internal priorities, not the buyer's decision journey

  • No shared framework for translating technical and regulatory complexity into customer-facing language

  • A product launch deadline with no alignment on what to say first

Key Decisions & Trade-offs

The critical question:
The strategic question wasn't what to include. It was what to lead with. Should we lead with what the platform does, or what it makes possible for buyers?

Verato's platform handles identity data management, a technically dense capability that means different things to a CISO, a CMO, and a clinical operations lead. Choosing the lead message meant deciding whose problem we were solving first.

The decision: lead with trust, not technology.

  • Frame every page around buyer outcomes: accurate patient identity, reliable data, confident decisions

  • Deprioritize product-led language in favor of outcome-led language mapped to how enterprise healthcare buyers evaluate risk

  • Hold this decision as a quality filter across every page, every navigation label, and every stakeholder review

What I Led

I led weekly collaborative work sessions with the full leadership team, using live IA mapping and wireframing to make trade-offs visible in real time. Getting decisions made in the room was the only way to hit the deadline without late-stage revision cycles.

Phase 1: Alignment & Strategy

Stakeholder navigation

  • Facilitated sessions with CEO, CMO, CPO, sales, content, and design, each with competing priorities for what the launch should emphasize

  • Used live sitemap and wireframe sessions to surface conflicts early and force alignment before design began

  • Built a priority message framework establishing one clear hierarchy per page based on buyer decision journey, not internal org structure

Experience foundations

  • Conducted B2B SaaS marketing analysis and observed Verato sales presentations to ground content strategy in how enterprise healthcare buyers actually evaluate identity platforms

  • Interviewed product managers to separate technical accuracy from customer-relevant language

  • Built IA and user flows collaboratively with the client team to accelerate sign-off and reduce ambiguity in handoff

With the IA and UX approved and stakeholder alignment locked, execution could move at sprint speed.

Phase 2: Creative Direction & Execution

With alignment locked, I led the Glantz design and engineering team through execution, maintaining the strategic decisions made in Phase 1 as a quality filter across every design choice.

Visual direction and design system

  • Established creative direction balancing Verato's technical credibility with human storytelling, a deliberate choice for an audience that is risk-averse and skepticism-first

  • Built visual language and design system the internal Verato team could extend after launch

  • Collaborated with Verato's internal creative director on brand system and style guide, building from the web design direction outward to ensure consistency across strategy, visuals, and messaging

Execution

  • Art directed animation approach for the Patient Journey platform, using scroll-triggered motion to ground complex data concepts in human stories

  • Led design and engineering sprints maintaining decision clarity and quality standards under a firm deadline

  • Partnered with (un)Common Logic on SEO keyword integration woven throughout page content

  • Ensured every deliverable traced back to the priority message framework established in Phase 1

The creative direction decision

Lead with human faces over technical diagrams. Use the hexagon system to connect identity data to real patients, not data architecture.

Before and After

Before and after homepage design, showing the shift from technology-led to trust-led visual and content strategy

Outcomes

Launch Results

115% increase in organic conversions

2.3X pipeline growth following launch

Structural Results

  • Five competing stakeholder groups aligned on a single product story before design began

  • Consistent decisions about how trust, identity, and data integrity were expressed across the platform

  • Shared experience framework used by product, design, and go-to-market teams beyond the initial launch

  • Scalable page template system giving the internal team clear principles for ongoing product and experience decisions

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