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The U.S. Web Design Standards are currently being used on hundreds of government sites, with an audience of more than 59 million monthly users. In this seventh post in our series, we sat down with Maureen Earley, program management specialist with the Office of Evaluation Sciences (OES), an office within the General Services Administration, to talk about her team’s use of the Standards on oes.gsa.gov. The OES brings diverse scientific experts onto their team for year-long rotations, where they work with federal agencies to implement and rigorously test changes made to government programs to evaluate whether or not they increase the ability of agencies to achieve their missions with greater success and efficiency.

USWDS: How did you hear about the U.S. Web Design Standards?

Maureen Earley: Members of our team worked with the 18F Federal Front Door team that was involved in creating the Standards. The Office of Evaluation Sciences is a champion of the Standards because we’re committed to making government easier for people to interact with. We also wanted to make sure our own website was an ambassador of the Standards and all that they stand for.

USWDS: Why did you decide to use the Standards?

Maureen Earley: We understood why the Standards were created and why good design across government is important. We also didn’t want to recreate the wheel in designing our website. For example, we realized during the design process that our OES logo didn’t meet color contrast requirements for accessibility. But, because we were referencing the Standards we were able to avoid this issue. We wanted to defer to the Standards and the expertise that already exists.

We also have been working with the team running Federalist, the open source static website publishing service, building out templates that other teams across government can use. For example, our Team page is now a Federalist template that anyone can use.

When we talk with other offices within government who want to redesign their sites, they get very excited about the Standards, and the Federalist platform, because someone has already done the work for them. It makes their job and life a lot easier.

USWDS: How did you integrate your work with the Standards?

Maureen Earley: We worked with one of 18F’s developers who was doing the various coding elements for us. She redid the back-end of our site to be compliant with the USWDS Jekyll theme.

USWDS: What were the benefits you gained by using the Standards?

Maureen Earley: There were several benefits: (a) it’s good design, and (b) it’s great that we’re contributing to a cohesive branding approach across all of government. Ideally, we will get to a reality that, when you visit a government website, you know you’re on a government site due to the design consistency.

USWDS: Is there anything the Standards team could do to help you in your efforts?

Maureen Earley: I was unaware of the public Slack channel, but I want to join because of my personal interest in design. Creating buy-in for the Standards within the government community is really important.

USWDS: Advice for other agencies?

Maureen Earley: The U.S. Web Design Standards really make life easier for all of us working in government, which in turn can save taxpayer dollars. Web developers (or even teams without web developers!) have a starting ground to work from, you don’t have to come up with your own branding, and it’s a proven toolkit of design features that make government services and information online more accessible to the public for a better government experience.


We’re looking to learn more from agencies that have used the Standards; if you’re interested in talking to us about your experience or have any feedback, feel free to send us an email at uswebdesignstandards@gsa.gov. You can also chat with the team in the new public Slack channel for the Standards!

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