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Didi Hirsch Mental Health Services
From fragmented web presence to unified digital platform. Didi Hirsch Mental Health Services consolidated five separate websites into one cohesive experience, increasing monthly users by 67% while making it easier for people in crisis to find help.
Here’s the short version for those evaluating whether this project is relevant to their situation.
Five separate sites created over years of growth. Services buried, audiences confused, crisis pathways unclear.
Audience-based information architecture, sub-brand design system, domain consolidation with SEO preservation, 10-language support.
67% increase in monthly users. Teen Line became third most-visited section. 71% engagement rate from healthcare partner referrals.
The problem wasn't five websites. It was five mental models. Consolidation only works when you unify the experience, not just the URLs.
Didi Hirsch Mental Health Services has been serving the Los Angeles community since 1942. They’re home to the nation’s first and largest Suicide Prevention Center. They operate the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline in their region, run Teen Line (a peer-to-peer support hotline), and provide comprehensive mental health and substance use treatment to over 270,000 people annually.
Their reputation in the community was strong. The problem was their digital presence.
Over years of growth and acquisitions, Didi Hirsch had accumulated multiple web properties: the main organization site, Teen Line, crisis services, a youth wellness center called Our Third Place, and a training academy. Each had been built separately, looked different, and required visitors to know exactly which URL to type for which service.
What that looked like in practice:
For someone in crisis, or a family member trying to find help for a loved one, this fragmentation created real barriers. A teenager searching for peer support might never discover that Teen Line was connected to the broader resources Didi Hirsch offered. A parent looking for youth services might not realize the organization also provided family therapy. The digital experience made Didi Hirsch look like five different organizations when it was actually one comprehensive system of care.
The analytics told the same story. Traffic concentrated on the homepage and careers section while mission-critical service pages remained largely invisible. People were finding the organization but struggling to find the specific help they needed.
There was a subtler problem too. Many of Didi Hirsch’s clients come from communities with complicated histories with healthcare and government systems. A website that felt cold, clinical, or institutional could reinforce exactly the distrust the organization worked so hard to overcome in person. The digital presence needed to feel as welcoming as the actual experience of walking through their doors.
We started with research. Months of GA4 and Ahrefs analysis, stakeholder interviews, competitive review, and detailed mapping of how different audiences actually used (or failed to use) the existing sites.
Three insights shaped everything that followed:
Before wireframing a single page, we mapped detailed journeys for nine distinct personas. A county contracts manager evaluating a grant opportunity moves through a site very differently than a teenager deciding whether to call a peer support line at 2am. These weren’t checkbox exercises. They directly informed navigation decisions, content hierarchy, and the emotional tone of different sections.
This project required strategy, design, development, and content to work from the same foundation. Decisions in one area rippled through every other.
Information architecture shaped SEO strategy. We couldn’t just consolidate pages. We needed to restructure around how different audiences naturally searched and what they expected to find. Navigation design reflected the user journey mapping. Content strategy informed both the words on the page and the visual hierarchy around them.
Every team member who touched the project consumed the same discovery materials. Not filtered briefs. The actual research. When our developer made decisions about page templates, they understood the emotional stakes. When our content strategist wrote service descriptions, they knew which misconceptions needed addressing.
Instead of organizing by what Didi Hirsch offers, we organized by who visitors are. "Get Help" breaks down into Adults, Teens & Young Adults, Children, and Caregivers. Someone in crisis doesn't need to parse organizational structure. They need to find themselves.
Teen Line needed to feel like Teen Line. The youth-focused aesthetic, the hand-drawn doodles, the peer-to-peer energy. Same with Our Third Place. We developed a design system that let these sub-brands maintain distinct personalities while clearly belonging to the Didi Hirsch family. Color assignments by service area created visual wayfinding: greens for substance use services, purples for youth programs, calming blues for suicide prevention.
The creative direction had to counter expectations of what a healthcare nonprofit site "should" look like. Bold, vibrant colors. Imagery that centered clients in an empowering way. Design that felt welcoming rather than institutional. Early concepts that leaned calmer were pushed toward more brightness and energy based on how the organization actually shows up in person.
Client
Didi Hirsch Mental Health Services
Industry
Mental Health / Nonprofit / Healthcare
Industry
Web Design, UX/UI Design, Content Strategy, SEO Strategy
Complete restructuring from fragmented properties to unified platform. Site mapping, user journey architecture, and mega menu system designed to surface deep content for multiple distinct audiences.
Custom design system with strategic color assignments by service area, distinct treatments for Teen Line and Our Third Place sub-brands, and an emotional register that feels welcoming rather than clinical. Responsive, accessible, built for the diverse community DDH serves.
Complete site copywriting informed by discovery research. Service descriptions that address actual user questions and concerns. Content organized to meet visitors wherever they are in their journey.
WordPress build with multi-language support (10 languages via Weglot), accessibility support via UserWay, and integration with external form systems. Domain consolidation with 301 redirects preserving SEO value across all legacy properties.
Within the first month post-launch, monthly users increased 67%. More importantly, traffic started flowing to the pages that actually mattered.
Teen Line, which previously existed on its own isolated domain, became the third most-visited section of the unified site. Users were discovering it through the main platform rather than needing to know a separate URL. The consolidation worked exactly as designed. Instead of fragmented properties competing for attention, services were feeding each other traffic.
Referrals from healthcare partners showed 71% engagement rates. When a hospital social worker or county health administrator sends someone to Didi Hirsch’s website, those visitors are finding what they need and staying engaged. That’s qualified traffic from professional referral sources, exactly the pathway the organization wanted to strengthen.
Service pages that had been buried in the old structure now receive consistent visibility. The donate page surfaced to the top five most visited pages. Traffic distributed across service areas rather than concentrating on just the homepage and careers section.
Ten languages now serve LA’s diverse community: Spanish, Armenian, Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Russian, Tagalog, Cantonese, Persian, and Khmer. Accessibility support through UserWay helps improve usability for visitors with disabilities. The infrastructure matches the organization’s commitment to serving everyone who needs help.
The internal impact was just as significant. A two-phase QA process kept the project moving despite needing input from multiple departments, program leads, and executive stakeholders. The organization now has a site structure and content management system their team can actually maintain and grow.
Why this moved the needle: Consolidation improved cross-discovery between services, and the audience-based IA reduced dead ends for people trying to find the right path quickly. Those outcomes followed from the structural decisions made during discovery.
Common questions about website consolidation and nonprofit redesign projects
It can be high risk if you consolidate without intent mapping and redirect planning. When it’s planned correctly, it’s one of the best ways to concentrate authority and reduce audience confusion. We map every URL from every legacy domain to its new destination, implement 301 redirects to preserve link equity, and monitor search performance closely after launch. In this project, Teen Line went from an isolated domain to the third most-visited section of the unified site. The consolidation didn’t dilute traffic. It concentrated and amplified it.
We start by mapping distinct journeys before designing anything. A county contracts manager evaluating a partnership opportunity moves through a site very differently than a teenager deciding whether to call a crisis line at 2am. For this project, we mapped nine separate personas across service recipients, healthcare partners, and donors. Those journeys directly informed navigation structure, content hierarchy, and the emotional tone of different sections. You can’t design for everyone by designing generically. You design for everyone by understanding each audience specifically.
This is a design system problem, not a branding conflict. We build systems that give sub-brands room to breathe while maintaining clear connection to the parent organization. For Didi Hirsch, Teen Line kept its hand-drawn doodles and youth-focused energy. Our Third Place maintained its distinct aesthetic. But both clearly belong to the same family through consistent navigation, shared design foundations, and strategic color assignments that create visual wayfinding across the site.
Complex organizations need a feedback process designed for complexity. We typically run a two-phase approach: first, tight collaboration with the core project team to get pages to a solid state, then a structured review process for broader stakeholders. The key is having clear mechanisms for capturing feedback without letting it derail timelines. Not every piece of input needs to be addressed immediately. Some gets implemented, some gets logged for future iterations.
It depends on the number of properties being consolidated, total content volume, stakeholder complexity, and requirements like multilingual support or accessibility compliance. Discovery alone can take weeks if you’re doing it properly. We’d rather give you an honest timeline after understanding your specific situation than quote something generic that doesn’t account for what makes your project different.
We audit everything before deciding what migrates. Some content gets carried forward as-is, some gets consolidated with similar pages, and some gets retired. For this project, we went from 200+ pages scattered across multiple domains to roughly 176 strategically organized pages. The goal isn’t to preserve everything. It’s to create a structure that actually serves users rather than just housing historical content.
Sometimes the existing platform is fine and the real problem is information architecture or design. Sometimes the CMS itself is the constraint. We evaluate on a case-by-case basis. This project used WordPress with Elementor, which gave us the flexibility we needed for custom templates while keeping ongoing maintenance manageable for the client’s internal team.
Translation tools like Weglot handle the text conversion, but multilingual support is really about understanding which communities you’re trying to reach and why. For Didi Hirsch, ten languages serve LA’s diverse population: Spanish, Armenian, Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Russian, Tagalog, Cantonese, Persian, and Khmer. That’s not a checkbox feature. It’s a reflection of who actually needs access to mental health services in that region.
It depends on the number of properties, content volume, custom functionality requirements, and whether you need ongoing support after launch. A straightforward two-site consolidation with existing content is different from unifying five domains with multilingual requirements, accessibility needs, and complex stakeholder dynamics. We scope projects individually after understanding the full picture. If you want a ballpark before that conversation, our website services page includes transparent pricing ranges.
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