This is where higher ed projects really diverge from corporate work—and where timelines extend most consistently.
The scale:
University sites we’ve built range from 50 pages to 250+ pages. It depends on how many programs you offer, whether you have faculty and staff bios, board of directors pages, summer camps, or other specialized content types.
But it’s not just the volume. It’s the complexity of getting that content created, approved, and organized across a complex institution.
When content coordination works well:
We’ve worked with teams who handle this coordination tango beautifully. One university assigned clear content ownership to specific people before kickoff, built realistic timelines with buffer built in, and delivered everything on schedule. Their approach? They treated content creation as a project unto itself with internal milestones, not as something that would happen “whenever we have time.” They designated one person to consolidate all internal feedback before it came to us, which meant we got clear, actionable direction instead of conflicting requests from multiple departments.
The magic touch though? They provided one clear source of truth on their programs, so our team was able to understand the program and organizational structure without needing to dig for it on the existing website (which might be out of date!) and in program brochures. Doing that upfront consolidation saved our team hours of work and helped us mitigate the risks involved with having lack of clarity when reviewing conflicting materials.
The content types that add complexity:
It’s not just pages. It’s the custom functionality that different content requires.
We’ve built tuition calculators that pull from spreadsheets of fees (U.S., Canadian, international students—all with different cost structures). Custom events systems. Microsites for news articles. Academic program pages built on templates, but with different needs per department and program type.
When every department needs different content types and volumes, you end up with custom modules for each. The module library gets huge. And each variation takes longer to design, build, and QA.
The microsite problem:
Many universities have departments that built their own microsites over the years. Now you’re trying to consolidate everything into one cohesive site with easier content management.
That means migrating content, merging structures, and often navigating departmental politics about autonomy and brand identity.
Migration vs. creation:
Most projects involve both. You’re migrating blog posts, news articles, faculty and staff bios. And you’re creating net-new content for program pages, key landing pages, updated messaging.
The creation part is where things slow down, because someone has to actually write that content. And getting it written, reviewed, and approved by all the relevant stakeholders takes time.
What helps:
Projects that handle content well do a few things differently:
- Content audit done before kickoff, or during the Research and Discovery phase, so you know what you’re working with and what needs to change
- Realistic assessment of internal team capacity (if you’re already at 100%, adding website content creation isn’t going to magically work)
- Single point of contact who consolidates feedback and requests internally instead of us trying to coordinate with seven different people
- Clear content deadline commitments, with buffer time built in