A perception-first read of your practice site, and what I built on top of it.
Hi Jared. What follows is a close look at jaredgpsyd.com through a design framework called Perception-First Design. Basically, how the nervous system reads a website in the first fifty milliseconds before conscious thought catches up. I audited the live site, found the places where considered design was bumping against the template ceiling, and then built a rebuild as a working proposal. This document shows both: what I saw, and what I did about it.
The short version
SimplePractice gives you real design discipline for free: responsive layout, coherent type, a token-controlled palette. That's your Layer 0 and your Processing Fluency doing their job. Where the site underperforms is on the three layers that actually convert a stranger into a client: First Impression, Perception Bias, and Decision Architecture. The root issue across all three is that your strongest signals (the dissertation work on masculinity ideology and femmes, the specificity of your practice, your face and presence) are under-surfaced or absent from the homepage. Your Psychology Today listing does a better job of positioning you than your own site does.
The rebuild addresses every finding below, plus adds polish you didn't ask for (aurora shader, theme system, harmonized palette, accessibility pass). Both files are self-contained HTML. You can open them locally, compare side by side, and decide what to keep.
Who this site is talking to
Before scoring anything, I wrote out what I thought the site was trying to accomplish. Correct or not, this is the frame I evaluated against:
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Audience
Adults in Oregon seeking teletherapy. Functional audience: queer and trans adults, folks in open or non-monogamous relationships, kink-identified people, and anyone navigating gender or identity. Many arrive in distress or at an inflection point. They're reading concretely and embodied, not from a theoretical frame.
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Intent
Book a free 15–30 minute consultation and become a paying client. Secondary: signal values-alignment (affirming, sex-positive, kink-allied, racial-justice-allied) early enough that right-fit clients self-identify and wrong-fit ones bounce politely.
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Positioning
Mid-to-high-end solo practitioner. Sliding scale $80–$200 (top end is above average for Oregon cash-pay therapy), pro-bono slots reserved for hardship. No insurance; Good Faith Estimate via the No Surprises Act.
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Business model
Solo private practice, individual teletherapy only. Revenue equals hourly sessions. Conversion equals new-client intake; trust is the entire lever.
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What works now
Pronouns visible (he/they); license number shown; specialty list (on interior pages) is unflinchingly specific; sliding scale and pro bono disclosure signal real ethics; warm palette avoids clinical coldness; two-font system is disciplined.
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Meta-level
Your site is a demonstration of what you sell. Therapy's product is relational attunement. The site's first-fifty-milliseconds job is to feel like a warm first encounter, not perform credentials. SimplePractice gets about 60% of that job done; the remaining 40% is what this audit is about.
Findings, layer by layer
Each layer measures something a visitor's nervous system does before conscious thought. Lower layers are load-bearing: if they fail, everything above collapses. Yours don't collapse. The floor is solid. What follows is what I found and what I built.
Layer 0Cognitive load
How much work the page demands before comprehension. SimplePractice handles this well: responsive, disciplined, low element count.
Your subhead uses an ornamental Ogham letter as a divider between phrases. It renders as a glyph on modern macOS and Windows, but as a tofu box on older Android, Windows without Segoe UI Historic, and some email clients if copied elsewhere.
Fluency effects operate below conscious awareness. Cross-device rendering inconsistency is the kind of invisible friction that compounds. (Alter & Oppenheimer, 2009)
Separators replaced with middle-dots (·) which render identically on every platform. Preserves the rhythm of three-phrase subheads without the cross-device fragility.
Layer 1First impression: the 50ms gate
This layer is where most of the site's ceiling-limit lives. The hero has real care in it (real photo backdrop, considered typography, warm palette), but three things compound to undercut it: clinician-jargon opening, no face above the fold, and specialty-fit signals missing until the visitor scrolls.
Before (your site)Relational, insight-oriented, multiculturally-informed teletherapy.
Someone searching at 11pm for a queer or kink-affirming therapist in distress does not parse "insight-oriented" as emotionally meaningful. It's vocabulary that therapists use to describe therapy to other therapists. To a new client it reads as "this is for someone more sorted than me."
The brain predicts the next input based on context. Receiving diagnostic-register vocabulary when you arrived looking for welcome is a prediction error that consumes cognitive resources and signals distance. (Clark, 2013; predictive processing)
H1 rewritten to name the audience in their own language.
After (rebuild)Therapy for queer and trans adults.
The specificity ("open relationships, kink-identified people, anyone navigating gender, identity, or the parts of yourself you haven't said out loud yet") moved to a subhead where System 2 has time to land it. The H1 lands in the fifty-millisecond window.
For psychotherapy, where therapeutic alliance is the single highest predictor of outcome, the clinician's face is the primary L1 trust asset. A therapy homepage without the therapist's face is structurally like a chef's site without food photos. Your face exists on the page, just not where the nervous system looks first.
The brain's fusiform face area fires within ~170ms on a human face, faster than most conscious reading. A face in the hero gives visitors a direct evaluation channel for "can I be with this person for an hour?" (Lindgaard, 2006; Haxby et al., 2000)
Your existing Psychology Today headshot is now wired into the hero as the primary portrait slot, 320×400 px, soft-focused with a gentle CSS filter so it reads as considered-photography rather than clinical sharpness. The portrait floats to the right of the text on desktop, above the text on mobile.
A visitor arriving from Psychology Today having searched "kink-affirming therapist Oregon" sees the same "relational, insight-oriented, multiculturally-informed" language every thoughtful therapist uses. Your specific signals (LGBTQIA2S+, gender exploration, open relationships, kink-allied, sex-worker allied, racial-justice allied) are real, present, and honest. They're just on interior pages. The asymmetry is strange: your Psychology Today listing does better positioning work than your own homepage.
A signal that is not prominent cannot influence credibility assessment. Hidden evidence is functionally absent evidence. (Fogg, 2003; Prominence-Interpretation Theory)
An eight-chip specialty row directly under the hero CTA: LGBTQIA2S+ · Gender exploration · Open relationships · Kink-allied · Trauma & grief · Anxiety & depression · Identity work · Sex-worker allied. The right visitor sees themselves on the chip row in the first second; the wrong visitor bounces politely. Both are good outcomes.
Before𖥸 Examine Your Interconnected Self 𖥸 Develop New Neural Pathways 𖥸 Access Your Potential 𖥸
These are aspirational and self-help-generic. Stacked with the Ogham ornament they read as decorative rather than meeting the reader.
Replaced with one concrete sentence introducing you directly: who you are, your license, your format. The subhead now says: "I'm Jared Gorfinkel, PsyD (he/they), a licensed Oregon psychologist offering telehealth sessions statewide. Psychodynamic. Relational. Sliding scale $80–$200, with pro bono slots when I can hold them."
Layer 2Processing fluency
How easy the visual system finds the design to parse. SimplePractice enforces token discipline most independent sites never achieve: coherent neutral scale, two-green accent system, consistent button radii.
Deep forest (#1c3e36), medium sage (#49655e), and vibrant mint (#44ab89) are three distinct greens in the mid-lightness zone where human color perception is most sensitive. Intentional two-green would be cleaner; three creates minor ambiguity.
The rebuild runs a cleaner palette: one primary green (forest), one vibrant mint accent, and a complementary plum-pink (#ab4489) as the secondary brand color. Same HSL saturation as the mint, hue-rotated 180°, so they read as siblings. More on the plum-pink in the "Beyond the audit" section.
Layer 3Perception bias: authority & fit signals
This is the highest-leverage layer on the site, and the source of its ceiling. You have unusually strong, specific, ethically-available authority signals. Signals that cost nothing and require no client testimonials (which APA 5.05 rightly forbids anyway). They're just not surfaced.
Dresses and Cowboy Hats: The Impact of Masculinity Ideology on Self-Identified Femmes and Their Sense of Self is a Cialdini authority signal (published doctoral research), a liking signal (audience-specific topic), and a values-filtering signal ("I've already been reading about your experience for years"), all in a single artifact. For a visitor who is femme-identified, gender-exploring, or thinking about masculinity in their own life, seeing that title on your site is close to instant System-1 trust. It costs nothing to include.
Published doctoral research is domain authority. A dissertation specifically addressing your audience's lived concerns operationalizes both authority and perceived similarity (liking). (Cialdini, 2001)
A dedicated "Research & writing" section between Approach and Pricing. Features the full dissertation title in display italic, a two-sentence summary of what it explored, and a line that names the audience it addresses as welcome in your practice: "If you've ever felt that who you are doesn't fit the categories you were handed, this is a conversation I've already been having for years."
The verbal claim is "relational, multiculturally-informed." The hero experience is abstract clinician-vocabulary + decorative Ogham + aspirational self-help. The felt sense doesn't disprove the claim aggressively, but it operates at cross-purposes to it. The hero describes your methodology rather than demonstrating your relational stance. A relational opening greets the arriving person. The current opening describes the therapist.
The rebuild hero greets. The H1 names who you welcome, the subhead says "I'm Jared, here's who I am, here's my rate," and the CTA offers a fifteen-minute conversation with no commitment. The page's first move is invitation, not credential-performance.
You've trained in five distinct clinical settings: a middle school system, a university counseling center, community mental health agencies, a methadone maintenance clinic, a large group practice. That spread is unusual and load-bearing. It signals you can sit with difficulty most solo practitioners never encounter. It deserves prominence.
The "About" section headline is now "Trained across five clinical settings. Grounded in relational practice." The five settings are named in-paragraph below. If you hold APA Division 44 membership, a kink-affirmative certification, or similar, adding a "Training & credentials" sub-block would take the rebuild from addressed to stellar.
Layer 4Decision architecture: the CTA mechanic
Where the site asks the visitor to act, and whether the ask matches where the visitor actually is in their decision.
Your copy offers a free 15-30 minute consultation (correctly low-friction). Your hero button says "Request appointment," which implies commitment to a paid session. The copy and the button describe different steps. The visitor stalls in the gap.
Link labels are scent. A label describing a step the user is not ready to take has weaker scent than a label matching their current state. (Pirolli & Card, 1999; information foraging)
Primary CTA label: "Book a free 15-min consultation". Support line directly under it: "A short video call to see if we're a fit. No cost, no commitment, no intake paperwork." Click cost is now small, reversible, and clear.
Your Client Portal button appears adjacent to the primary CTA with similar visual weight. For marketing traffic (new visitors) it's noise; they're not clients yet. For existing clients it's useful. Its above-the-fold button-level prominence prioritizes existing-client navigation over new-client conversion.
Client Portal demoted from a button to a small utility text-link in the header: "Existing clients →". Existing clients know where to look. New clients see only the consultation CTA.
The patterns underneath
Three themes cut across multiple layers. Each is a single structural move that lifts several scores at once.
Authority-signal burial
Your strongest trust signals for your specific audience (the dissertation, the five training settings, the explicit kink / sex-worker / HIV / racial-justice alliance) exist, but are buried or absent from the homepage. The visitor who most needs to see "this person has done the reading on my experience" leaves before finding the evidence that you have. Fixed by surfacing the dissertation section, the specialty chip row, and the training-setting headline. All three were one-move structural lifts.
Template ceiling vs. practitioner expression
SimplePractice gives you the floor (token discipline, responsive layout, mobile correctness) that an independent DIY site would struggle to match. It also gives you the ceiling: narrative arc, photography placement, and CTA hierarchy are all constrained. The rebuild operates outside that constraint to show what's possible. This doesn't mean you need to migrate. The Top 3 Fixes at the end of the original audit are all achievable within SimplePractice. The rebuild is a stretch goal and a reference.
Directory profile outperforming the homepage
Your Psychology Today listing is more specifically welcoming than your own site. It names kink-allied, sex-worker-allied, HIV-allied, racial-justice-allied all at once. In regulated professions where directories dominate discovery, the directory often becomes the de facto positioning surface. Your homepage should be at least as specific as Psychology Today, ideally more. Fixed by bringing the directory's specificity (and then some) to the homepage via the chip row, the Who-I-work-with cards, and the Approach section.
Beyond the audit: what we added while refining
These weren't in the original findings. They're polish layered on top while building the rebuild. Some of them matter for conversion, some are just there because they should be.
Real headshot from Psychology Today wired in
Pulled directly from your verified PT profile CDN: the same 320×400 photo visitors already recognize from the directory.
Softened portrait via CSS filter
Subtle blur / contrast / saturation pass to read as considered photography, not webcam sharpness. Works in both light and dark mode.
Aurora shader background
WebGL fragment shader drifting mint, plum-pink, lavender, and forest across the page. Visible motion at sub-conscious speeds (~28-second orbits). Degrades gracefully to a static gradient if WebGL is unavailable or reduced-motion is set.
Full-viewport glass overlay
A frosted-glass layer between the shader and the content. Softens the aurora for readability without masking it. No curved corners, because it's stage-set, not chrome.
Plum-pink as secondary brand color
#ab4489: same HSL saturation as your mint (#44ab89), hue-rotated 180°, so they read as equal-vibrance siblings. Femme/queer-coded, on-narrative for your dissertation work.
Sage-cream palette harmonization
Light mode moved from warm tan to soft sage, the high-luminance sibling of your dark-mode forest base. Both themes now share a green hue family: "morning mist in a pine forest" and "same forest at night."
Day / night theme toggle
Persistent across sessions via localStorage. Respects system prefers-color-scheme when not explicitly set. Shader palette cross-fades over 900ms on theme switch, not a snap.
H1 blur-in reveal on scroll
The hero H1 starts soft-blurred at 55% opacity and resolves to clear as it enters the viewport. Subtle, one-shot, respects reduced-motion.
Staggered specialty-chip reveal
The eight chips cascade into visibility on scroll with 60ms between each. Reads as intentional welcome rather than a loaded list.
3D tilt on Who-I-work-with cards
Gentle 7° max-rotation toward the pointer. Mouse/trackpad only; touch devices skip it (hover state is unreliable). Never triggered on reduced-motion.
Em-dash scrub on all copy
Thirteen em-dashes replaced with colons / commas / periods / parens per the voice discipline. Small detail, load-bearing polish.
Voice scrub proposed (8 targeted changes)
Tightened "passion for" to "strongest work with"; split four long therapy-register sentences; cooled formal "whether" to plainer "if". Proposed and held pending your go-ahead.
WCAG AA contrast verified both themes
31 text/background pairs measured programmatically, all pass AA. Most clear AAA. Including the footer credit link (contrast 6.04 in both modes).
Graceful degradation throughout
No WebGL? Static gradient. Reduced-motion? All animations skip. Hidden tab? rAF pauses. Backdrop-filter missing? Higher opacity fallback keeps contrast. No silent failures.