Money Without Borders
Due is building the financial infrastructure of a fairer future - a global platform for fast, low-cost international money movement. Powered by stablecoins and decentralised networks, Due gives people and businesses multi-currency accounts, global transfers, and merchant services without relying on banks. It’s open, non-custodial, and built for a world without borders.
They came to Linford to design and build a website that could explain what they do clearly — without dumbing it down. It needed to speak to early adopters, developers, and everyday users alike, and reflect the scale of their ambition.
Decentralised Doesn’t Have to Mean Confusing
Crypto platforms often fall into two traps: either too complex or too vague. Due’s team wanted clarity - a site that could explain the power of decentralised money, without buzzwords, clutter, or assumptions. The product is technical, but the impact is human. The site needed to show both.
This wasn’t about selling hype. It was about building trust.
Sharp, Clear, and Built to Scale
We built a clean, flexible site on Webflow - with sharp typography, clear navigation, and enough space to grow as the product evolves. The layout was kept minimal, letting the content and mission speak for itself. Messaging was refined to stay technical where needed but always accessible.
Behind the scenes, we built CMS systems for blogs, updates, and FAQs - giving the team full control without touching code.
Launch-Ready for a Global Mission
The site launched in time to support Due’s growth and fundraising. It now acts as both a front door for users and a foundation for product updates, team recruitment, and community building. As the platform expands, the site is ready to scale with it - without needing a rebuild.
It’s not flashy. It’s fast, clear, and mission-aligned - just like the product.
What Others Can Learn From This
If you’re building for a global audience, clarity beats complexity. A good site doesn’t just show the product - it earns trust.
Build something you don’t need to explain twice.