Recruiting Interactive

If recruiting applicants, employees or new donors is a high priority, you may want to consider investing in an interactive Flash piece. Whether you are looking for something fun to attract students, or something inspiring to remind alumni of the good ol' days, Silverpoint's design team can deliver. Additionally, we consult with you about ease of updating, longevity, and budget to make sure that the solution we develop meets your needs now and down the road.

Choate Rosemary Hall: Recruitment Flash

Choate Rosemary Hall

Life@Choate allows applicants to hear about the school in students' own words. In addition to short audio clips, visitors can add related links to their "backpack", thereby allowing them to access those pages quickly and easily. View Site

Hotchkiss: Recruitment Flash

The Hotchkiss School

Hotchkiss wanted to translate the experience of a campus visit to the web, so Silverpoint created a Flash piece that allows the user to follow many different people through their days at the school. As in real campus visits, users run into the same people throughout their experience, and can hear their perspectives and even follow them. View Site

Orchard School: Recruitment Flash

The Orchard School

The Orchard School Flash piece centers around the 9 promises concept, initially developed for the school's new viewbook and carried through to the web. The navigation of the piece allows users to jump around non-sequentially, thereby conveying the spirit of inquiry that embodies this progressive school. View Site

Visi: Recruitment Flash

Georgetown Visitation

Arranged like a scrapbook, this Flash piece feels like a peak into a life of a girl at Visi. View Site

Woodward: Recruitment Flash

Woodward Academy

Here visitors can read the words of Woodward students, teachers and alumni while a playlist of student music plays in the background. Users can even choose which song from the list they would like to hear. View Site

Antilles School: Recruitment Flash

Antilles School

"Faces of Antilles" contains an initial message that dissolves over individual profiles of student, faculty and staff. Each profile reveals a different and spontaneous quote that remains in the grid pattern of the "faces" format. It visually communicates the Antilles School values of community and diversity. View Site