The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Company goes small to snare clients

7-person design firm Hounder has done work for Adobe, Esri and UL

- By Kevin Smith kvsmith@scng.com

When Joshua Northcott worked as a web director at Esri, he often found himself frustrated, akin to a small fish swimming in a huge pond.

The software company, he said, hired top-notch people who worked on multimilli­on-dollar projects, but many of them went over budget and took longer than expected to complete.

Northcott opted to leave the big pond and create a smaller, more efficient one.

Hounder, founded in 2016 in Redlands, has grown to a sevenperso­n team that creates digital designs for clients. As the company’s co-founder and chief technology officer, Northcott works at keeping the company’s projects on time and within budget.

“Coming from the enterprise software end, we thought, ‘What if we stepped up to become the kind of company we were always looking for?’” he said. “And that’s what we did. We only take a handful of projects at a time.”

Hounder turns away some potential customers as a result. But the business has helped several major technology players — including Adobe, Esri and UL — fine tune their online operations and business strategies.

“We create cool designs, but the developmen­t side is very advanced as well,” Northcott said. “We create a more personaliz­ed experience. We tell clients, ‘This is where you are with your company, and this is where you should be.’”

Everstream Analytics, a San Marcos-based company that provides risk scores and predictive insights into the world’s supply chain industry, is one Hounder client that needed help in rebranding its business and updating the functional­ity of features on its website.

“We engaged Hounder to repopulate and rebrand our website,” company spokeswoma­n Heather Gondek said. “We needed to make it more global in nature because it was not optimized to support translated content. So now, if you are in Germany, it will ping messages in German and that’s what you want.”

Hounder’s team of designers and developers also made Everstream’s website more visually appealing.

“It was very straightfo­rward before — very basic,” Gondek said.

“They created a lot of movement and animation on the page that breathes as you scroll, and now we also have video on the website.”

The idea, Northcott said, was to bring life to a company’s online presence while guiding prospectiv­e customers to the informatio­n they’re seeking in an efficient, user-friendly way.

“We create an experience, a journey for people and funnel them correctly to where they want to go,” he said. “We have senior design developers on our team and that’s where our sweet spot is.”

That sweet spot is paying off. Northcott said the company is on track to generate $2 million in revenue this year.

Hounder’s reach also has expanded, designing and implementi­ng websites and marketing systems across 12 countries and in 10 languages. Northcott said the company has helped increase clients’ e-commerce revenues by an average of 40%.

UL, a company that provides safety certificat­ion and compliance testing services, also turned to Hounder for help.

Hounder joined forces with UL’S web and marketing teams to plan and implement a project that highlights all of UL’S services in one click.

“They evaluated 1,522 keywords and 1,113 pages and gave us actionable guidance for each page,” Chad Reynolds, UL’S director of industry marketing, said in a statement. “Hounder made the complex simple and produced outstandin­g results.”

 ?? ANJALI SHARIF-PAUL STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Hounder co-founder and chief technology officer Josh Northcott, right, meets with web developer Rashad Naime.
ANJALI SHARIF-PAUL STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Hounder co-founder and chief technology officer Josh Northcott, right, meets with web developer Rashad Naime.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States