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Web Development Media Production 2 months 2025

Livo Media

Premium Austrian media production.

Website for an Austrian media production company.

Livo Media
Austria
Market
Media Production
Focus
Website
Deliverable

About this project

Livo Media is a premium media production company based in Austria, operating at the intersection of brand storytelling, video production, and visual content strategy. Their clients are Austrian and European businesses looking for production partners who understand not just the craft, but how media assets translate into commercial results — campaign materials, brand films, product content, and corporate communication that works across digital and broadcast channels. The brief was straightforward in its ambition and precise in its difficulty: build a site that positions Livo Media correctly in the Austrian market, communicates what they do without noise, and converts the right kind of visitor into an enquiry. Not a portfolio showcase for everyone who lands on the page — a qualifying tool for the buyers who matter. In Austrian media production, reputation travels through referrals, but the decision to make contact is increasingly made after a prospective client reviews your digital presence. Brand managers, marketing leads, and heads of communications at mid-to-large companies will check the site before they pick up the phone. If the site is cluttered, if services are unclear, or if the enquiry process feels like it was designed for freelancers rather than B2B buyers, they move on. Livo needed to pass that evaluation with precision. Working closely with the Livo Media team, we mapped their client base, defined the service areas that mattered most to those clients, and built a content and design framework around a single question: what does a senior marketing decision-maker need to see and feel in order to choose to send a brief? The answer shaped every decision — from the page architecture to the enquiry form to the copy register. The result is a site that communicates authority without overstating it. It does not try to impress through volume. It earns attention through clarity: clear service definitions, a coherent visual language, and a direct path to the next step. For a production company whose work is inherently visual, the discipline to let structure lead — and to resist filling every pixel — is itself a statement about how they work.

The Challenge

Media production companies face a specific credibility problem online: their instinct is to show everything, because the work is visual and volume signals capability. But for B2B buyers evaluating a production partner, visual noise is a disqualifier. When a brand manager lands on a site and cannot immediately understand what the company specialises in, what types of projects they take on, and how to start a conversation, they leave. Livo Media's existing presence did not reflect the quality of the work or the calibre of the clients they were capable of serving. The site lacked a clear service structure — it was not obvious whether Livo focused on video, photography, branded content, or some combination, or what scale of project they were built for. Without that signal, prospective clients could not self-qualify, and Livo could not filter for the briefs that matched their positioning. The Austrian market amplifies this challenge. Austrian buyers in the brand and marketing space tend to be thorough, risk-averse, and relationship-oriented. They do not submit enquiries impulsively. They research, compare, and evaluate over time. A site that fails to communicate positioning clearly does not just lose a lead — it removes Livo from consideration before any conversation is possible. Livo needed a site that did the qualifying work automatically: signalling premium positioning, defining service scope, and making the enquiry process feel appropriate for a structured B2B engagement rather than a quick contact form submission.

Our Approach

The design direction was minimal and high-contrast by deliberate choice. Rather than building a portfolio-heavy experience that showcases volume, the site was structured to establish positioning first and let selected work provide proof. A restrained visual language — disciplined typography, generous negative space, a limited palette — communicates that Livo operates at a level where less is more. That design register itself signals the right things to the buyers they want to reach. Service architecture was treated as a strategic priority. Each production category was given its own clear definition: what Livo does, the context in which they do it, and the type of client or project it is suited for. This gives visitors a fast, reliable way to understand the offer without having to interpret a dense portfolio or make assumptions. The enquiry flow was designed specifically for B2B buyers. Rather than a generic contact form, the process was structured to invite a brief — a short set of inputs that signal the nature of the project, the timeline, and the expected scope. This framing does two things: it makes the experience feel appropriate for senior buyers who want to give information rather than just submit a name and email, and it gives Livo a stronger starting point for every initial conversation. Copy was written for the Austrian market with a register that is direct, professional, and free of production-industry clichés. The tone treats the reader as a decision-maker, not a prospect to be convinced. Together, the design, structure, and copy work as a coherent system that qualifies visitors and moves the right ones toward contact.

How we did it

  1. 01

    Scope and structure

    1–2 weeks

    Defined pages, content blocks, and contact flow with Livo Media.

  2. 02

    Design and build

    4–6 weeks

    Designed and built the site with clear navigation and contact path.

  3. 03

    Launch

    1 week

    Go-live and handover.

Clear presentation of our services and a straightforward way for clients to reach us.

Livo Media

Client

Frequently Asked Questions

What was built for Livo Media?
Livo Media is a premium media production company based in Austria, operating at the intersection of brand storytelling, video production, and visual content strategy. Their clients are Austrian and European businesses looking for production partners who understand not just the craft, but how media assets translate into commercial results — campaign materials, brand films, product content, and corporate communication that works across digital and broadcast channels. The brief was straightforward in its ambition and precise in its difficulty: build a site that positions Livo Media correctly in the Austrian market, communicates what they do without noise, and converts the right kind of visitor into an enquiry. Not a portfolio showcase for everyone who lands on the page — a qualifying tool for the buyers who matter. In Austrian media production, reputation travels through referrals, but the decision to make contact is increasingly made after a prospective client reviews your digital presence. Brand managers, marketing leads, and heads of communications at mid-to-large companies will check the site before they pick up the phone. If the site is cluttered, if services are unclear, or if the enquiry process feels like it was designed for freelancers rather than B2B buyers, they move on. Livo needed to pass that evaluation with precision. Working closely with the Livo Media team, we mapped their client base, defined the service areas that mattered most to those clients, and built a content and design framework around a single question: what does a senior marketing decision-maker need to see and feel in order to choose to send a brief? The answer shaped every decision — from the page architecture to the enquiry form to the copy register. The result is a site that communicates authority without overstating it. It does not try to impress through volume. It earns attention through clarity: clear service definitions, a coherent visual language, and a direct path to the next step. For a production company whose work is inherently visual, the discipline to let structure lead — and to resist filling every pixel — is itself a statement about how they work.
How long did the Livo Media project take?
The Livo Media project was completed in 2 months. The process included 3 phases: Scope and structure, Design and build, Launch.
What technologies were used to build Livo Media?
Livo Media was built using Web, Media, Austria, Production. The technology stack was selected for performance, scalability, and long-term maintainability.
What was the main challenge with the Livo Media project?
Media production companies face a specific credibility problem online: their instinct is to show everything, because the work is visual and volume signals capability. But for B2B buyers evaluating a production partner, visual noise is a disqualifier. When a brand manager lands on a site and cannot immediately understand what the company specialises in, what types of projects they take on, and how to start a conversation, they leave. Livo Media's existing presence did not reflect the quality of the work or the calibre of the clients they were capable of serving. The site lacked a clear service structure — it was not obvious whether Livo focused on video, photography, branded content, or some combination, or what scale of project they were built for. Without that signal, prospective clients could not self-qualify, and Livo could not filter for the briefs that matched their positioning. The Austrian market amplifies this challenge. Austrian buyers in the brand and marketing space tend to be thorough, risk-averse, and relationship-oriented. They do not submit enquiries impulsively. They research, compare, and evaluate over time. A site that fails to communicate positioning clearly does not just lose a lead — it removes Livo from consideration before any conversation is possible. Livo needed a site that did the qualifying work automatically: signalling premium positioning, defining service scope, and making the enquiry process feel appropriate for a structured B2B engagement rather than a quick contact form submission.
How did Zulbera approach the Livo Media project?
The design direction was minimal and high-contrast by deliberate choice. Rather than building a portfolio-heavy experience that showcases volume, the site was structured to establish positioning first and let selected work provide proof. A restrained visual language — disciplined typography, generous negative space, a limited palette — communicates that Livo operates at a level where less is more. That design register itself signals the right things to the buyers they want to reach. Service architecture was treated as a strategic priority. Each production category was given its own clear definition: what Livo does, the context in which they do it, and the type of client or project it is suited for. This gives visitors a fast, reliable way to understand the offer without having to interpret a dense portfolio or make assumptions. The enquiry flow was designed specifically for B2B buyers. Rather than a generic contact form, the process was structured to invite a brief — a short set of inputs that signal the nature of the project, the timeline, and the expected scope. This framing does two things: it makes the experience feel appropriate for senior buyers who want to give information rather than just submit a name and email, and it gives Livo a stronger starting point for every initial conversation. Copy was written for the Austrian market with a register that is direct, professional, and free of production-industry clichés. The tone treats the reader as a decision-maker, not a prospect to be convinced. Together, the design, structure, and copy work as a coherent system that qualifies visitors and moves the right ones toward contact.
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