Insights / Threads
We write stories about our day-to-day as a digital studio: about working methodologies, about new development tools, about what we learn from our projects... All of them topics that interest us and with which we want to make our own contribution to the community of designers, developers and marketers.
A visual identity should not be reviewed only because it has been around for a long time. It should be reviewed when it starts limiting a company’s trust, clarity, or ability to grow. Sometimes the signal appears in a sales presentation, a campaign, or a conversation with clients. Other times, the limitations become obvious when trying to evolve a digital product. The brand still exists, but it no longer represents precisely what the organization needs and is capable of offering.
WordPress still dominates the CMS market in 2026. According to the latest figures from April 2026, WordPress powers 42% of all websites in the world, and 60% if we only look at sites running on a CMS. Even so, it is no longer growing with the same momentum as before. That mix of leadership, stagnation, and simpler alternatives has opened up a legitimate question: is it still worth it for a corporate website? The short answer is yes, although with caveats. Only when it is chosen with judgment and managed with a level of rigor that many companies still do not apply does WordPress remain fully relevant.
AI assistants are already answering millions of shopping queries every day—and if your brand doesn’t show up in those answers, you basically don’t exist to those users. GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) is all about getting your content ready to be cited by tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity. In this guide, we break down how source selection works, what structure your content needs, and why is offering a unique window of opportunity right now for anyone who moves early.
OpenClaw for business helps teams automate reporting, sales follow-up, and internal operations with AI agents that run in their own infrastructure and connect to the tools they already use.
Web accessibility in the public sector is not optional. Legislation across Europe and beyond requires government websites and apps to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA. Yet the majority of public sector sites still fall short. In this article we walk through how we approach an accessibility audit, what we actually test, and how we document findings so your team can fix them.
About 80% of the population uses a social media network on a daily basis, so promoting your website on them is a great idea for your business. But it’s not just about what you share on them, it’s about how you do it! You can control all the posts on your social media profile, but did you know that you can also control (somewhat) the posts of others when they share content from your site on their profiles? This is achieved through Open Graph (OG) metatags.