Teach First wins best website award

-


Education Charity Teach First’s graduate website was named Best Website by the Association of Graduate Recruiters (AGR) at their annual conference in Newport Wales, on Monday 5 July.

The site, designed by Teach First’s internal team, City & Law and Euro RSCG Riley, beat off stiff competition from recruiting giants PWC, Accenture, IBM and Goldman Sachs to scoop the award.

The judges, drawn from AIESEC, a global organisation that transforms students into leaders, praised the Teach First website for its combination of inspiring design and intuitive construction that allowed graduates to easily navigate the site.

The charity’s use of imagery that ‘embraced diversity’ and made students feel welcome was also highlighted by the judges as key factors in the site’s success.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Built with a modest budget of £20,000, the website, which is refreshed annually to appeal to new graduates, receives around 100,000 unique visitors each year.

Teach First Director – Graduate Recruitment James Darley said: “It is wonderful that our website has been recognised by the AGR. It bears testament to the work we have done to truly understand our users’ present and future needs and deliver a website that elegantly does its job”.

“Our website is increasingly the first point of contact a graduate has with Teach First and we have gone to great lengths to ensure that the site is as clear, focused, informative and as friendly as possible. The increasing numbers of students who are visiting our website prove that we are getting a lot of things right but we are not complacent and we will continue to work to improve the candidate experience.”



Latest news

Transgender staff excluded from single-sex toilets under new equality guidance

Transgender people must be excluded from single-sex toilets and changing rooms that correspond with their lived gender under updated...

Simon Coker: Closing the emotional gap – why AI in the workplace is as much a human challenge as a technological one

AI adoption is transforming how work gets done across every sector. But its deeper impact is less visible: it is reshaping how people feel about their work.

Employment tribunal delays stretch towards 2030 as lawyers warn system is nearing collapse

Employment tribunal hearings are being delayed for years as lawyers warn mounting backlogs are undermining workplace justice.

Keeping culture and purpose at the centre of a growing fintech

A fintech people leader explains how culture, wellbeing and purpose are being protected during rapid business growth.
- Advertisement -

Migrant worker with no right to work in UK wins discrimination case against employer

An employment tribunal has ruled that a migrant worker without the legal right to work in Britain can still pursue successful discrimination claims.

Government to replace some GP sick notes with return-to-work plans

Workers in four English regions will be directed towards personalised health and employment support as ministers test alternatives to GP-issued fit notes.

Must read

Inge Woudstra: A new role for women

Over 50 percent of UK graduates are women, professional...

Lauren Webb: Leadership lessons – we rise by lifting (or training) others

The way organisations prepare new managers decides whether they grow into talent multipliers, or retreat towards helicopter parenting.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you