USA Swimming unveiled a new look for its website on Monday, giving the site a badly needed update.
When USA Swimming launched its new website in March of 2017, the announcement was for a total site overhaul that completely changed the look of the governing body’s presence on the web.
That it certainly was. In spite of a significant cost outlay, the new website was severely lacking in many areas. While the addition of the Data Hub was a crucial upgrade for swim fans, in general the relaunched website was hard to navigate, hard to use, hard to reference, and constantly bogged down with errors.
About a year-and-a-half after that launch, USA Swimming was already back into a redesign schedule, taking their first trip to meet with Denver-based design firm Spire Digital to talk about making improvements to the site in December, 2018.
Since the last redesign, USA Swimming has seen a substantial turnover in its staff. While the prior redesign was overseen by then-Chief Marketing Officer Matt Farrell, who is no longer with USA Swimming, the new site was largely led by Jake Grosser, the organization’s Director of Business Intelligence. Hired in 2014, 2 years after graduating from Northwestern with a Master’s degree in Sports Administration, Grosser started his career with USA Swimming as a marketing manager (after 3 years at WME | IMG). There he worked primarily with the APA program, which involves governing body athlete appearances in exchange for an annual stipend.
In November of 2018, he was promoted to Director of Business Intelligence, which coincided with the ramping up of the latest redesign project.
This time, USA Swimming conducted extensive member research to see what people liked about the website and what people didn’t like about the website.
Among the major themes that they heard was that it took too many clicks to find information that people needed. This led to a reimagining of the sites header information, grouping resources by “swimmers & parents,” “coaches and team leaders,” “officials,” and other functional groups that would direct people to their most common resources more frequently.
That part of the project was definitely a success. Previously, pages that were basically impossible to find without using Google’s search engine as a primary navigation tool are now easily located via the top-level menus on the site.
The general feel of the site has substantially improved as well, with certain widgets and design elements being repeated throughout the site, making navigation feel more familiar and comfortable.
Among the major upgrades is the fact that every time a link is clicked, the new page that opens gets its own URL. In the previous version of the site, many pages were impossible to link to directly.
While the organization will fairly take criticism for having to do a major overhaul so shortly after a previous (and expensive) overhaul, Grosser was keen to point out that this redesign was far more “efficient” than the last. That’s because this time, the back-end structure of the site didn’t change, only the way it was displayed to the end user. That meant far less work on back-end databases and infrastructure that is far more costly and time-consuming than cosmetic front-end design elements.
Grosser says that the role out is a first major step, and that other changes will continue to be made as they receive more feedback on the new look.
The project, which is more than 18 months in the making, had a goal to be launched before the originally-scheduled 2020 U.S. Olympic Trials. While the global coronavirus pandemic pushed those Trials back until 2021, USA Swimming wanted to stay on track with that rollout.
While USA Swimming has been discussing an upgrade to its membership system, including digital registration, that is not included in this upgrade and is being treated as a separate project.
SwimSwam was given a preview of the new site last week. Below is a breakdown of our favorite updates and new features, and areas where we still think the site could use some improvements.
Best Upgrades:
- Moving the data hub from a singular place to a list of links in a drop-down menu is a huge upgrade. While the idea of the previous data hub was great, its navigability was a nightmare.
- While live streamed events on usaswimming.org will still likely be streamed on the home page, those live streams will also now have direct links, as will event pages (which previously didn’t).
- Finding things like meeting minutes is a lot more clear and straight-forward than it used to be. Documents can be sorted by years, filtering out a lot of the noise. Finding events and tickets is also much, much easier.
- The USA Swimming records team did extensive research and assembled historic teams going back to essentially the beginning of time. That includes Olympic, World Championship, and World University Games teams. For the true swim geeks, this is a treasure-trove of data.
Needs Some Work:
- Some data sets have been collapsed behind “see more” buttons that can make it harder to work with the information on those pages. Grosser says they’re still looking at some of those design elements and the best way to implement them.
- The times databases like event rank search and individual times search were pretty terrible to navigate previously, and they might have actually gotten a little worse with this upgrade. Fixing that will likely require a separate back-end overhaul and would have to be a better project. The swimrankings.net interface continues to be the gold standard, in our opinion.
The new individual time search is horrible. You can’t simply look for a lifetime best time like the old version.
i know…you can only see times from one season at a time.
Found a semi work around. However it still does not show all times. One swimmer it cut off after the 200 FR LCM… So it still needs some work.
1. click advanced search,
2. show only fastest by event
3. clear out the competition year
4. use FROM date and TO date.
And the NCAA times search still uses the interface from 2-3 iterations ago. Which at least works.
It looks like the deck pass app changed as well, and looking up times on that is incredibly tough now
Clean look. Massive improvement. Nice job. Club portal access is down and has been down for weeks now.
PRAISE BE!!!! -Wanda Jo
Ughhhh. I tried searching up my times but I can’t access them. Because there are multiple USA swimming members with the same name as me, but they couldn’t show all of them on the same page, I couldn’t find myself there. I used to be able to access a 2nd page, but for some reason I can’t do that now. Gonna take some time to figure out this new site.
This problem doesn’t happen with other things though (there is a down button)
By the way, I noticed something funny about the top 100 age group times all time. This happened on the old site too. The #100 swimmer is significantly slower than the #99 swimmer, and it does not make sense. The #100 time is not the real #100 time but it is often one of the times swam at one of the most recent meets. Sometimes this happens with both the #100 and the #99 time.
Yes the top 100 ag times all time are kind of weird. Sometimes they list a swimmer that never existed, or times for the swimmer that the swimmer never actually swam. This is less common and doesn’t happen to all of the events but… Read more »
My daughter is a para swimmer and she is incorrectly listed number 3 in an event between Reagan Smith and Alex Walsh. Its been there for years now.
You need to contact Todd DeSorbo immediately!
The national team rosters should have a hot link to the ahtlete’s bio. Do they even have bios on the website? Doesn’t look like it. Such a basic thing to promote your athletes. I like the historical Olympic rosters but no link to the actual results are available? Just a PDF of the roster. I’d like to see a more robust database of this kind of stuff. They aren’t even trying if you ask me.
The pages are too cluttered with unrelated links. The Simone Manual interview has upcoming open water event links at the bottom. I think I could write a short novel picking this thing apart if they want to pay me.
On the demonstration we got, they had really good looking bios pages. Not sure what happened to those.
i probably didnt look hard enough. I typed in “nathan adrian bio” and top hits were some video things. It shouldnt be that hard to find.
Click directly on “Meet the Team.” Maybe that’s not what you’re talking about, but this provides actual bios of the swimmers (including times, history, etc).
Ah hah. There they are.
yeah i see it now. I didn’t think that was an option. I was using the drop down choices of national team and then also rosters expecting it to be there.
I think you can view bios on the foundation/about-us/ambassadors page. Let me know if that works, I see Simone’s bio is there.
Also, there are multiple Spire Digitals out there. Could you add a link to this particular design firm within the article? I’m just curious to learn more about them.
Hey Sam! Any relation to the Nick Farmen who works at the Spire Digital that did this website redesign? The guy who includes among his job duties “Link building” for the company? If you want to learn more about Spire Digital, Nick might be a good first stop, sounds like he’s got some expertise in that area ;-).