BT Sport for Business needed to improve how effectively its website drove subscriptions.
Despite securing new exclusive football fixtures, a major competitive win over Sky, the existing site struggled to communicate value clearly or convert interest into sign-ups.
The primary audience was pub landlords and managers. They are time-poor, often on their feet, and rarely sitting down at a desktop computer. Mobile traffic was high, but the experience was not designed around their behaviour or constraints. Key information such as fixtures, packages, pricing, and sign-up options was hard to scan and slow to act on.
Pub owners are not just business customers. They are football fans themselves.
To engage them, the site needed to feel less like a traditional corporate B2B platform and more like a premium sports product, while still being fast, practical, and easy to use during a busy working day.
Competitor analysis showed that mobile experience and fixture-led storytelling were underused across the category. This created a clear opportunity to differentiate.

This was a design-led project focused on clarity, pace, and conversion.
I led the creative direction, shaping a mobile-first experience that prioritised:
Given tight budgets and technical constraints, content was intentionally simplified. Information architecture was streamlined to reduce development overhead while maintaining a premium feel.
I worked closely with designer Cleber Zerrener, collaborating on visual exploration, layout systems, and interaction patterns.
Together, we balanced expressive sports-led visuals with practical design decisions that supported speed, readability, and scalability. This close partnership helped turn what could have been a dry, functional brief into a confident and engaging digital experience.



The result was a more focused, engaging platform that better supported BT Sport for Business’s commercial goals and competitive edge.