Pulse is a split-screen landing page template built for HR directors who need to turn cultural hunches into C-suite-ready data. It walks visitors through a three-step engagement risk assessment, delivers a scored engagement report, and offers a custom action playbook. The design pairs deep command navy with brass-badge gold for an executive-floor aesthetic that signals authority and trust.
by Rocket studio
Pulse is a single-page, split-screen landing page template designed for employee engagement platforms targeting HR directors at mid-market companies. It guides visitors through a three-step assessment flow, surfaces an engagement risk score, and delivers a downloadable action playbook. The visual identity uses a Navy Authority color system to project executive authority from the first scroll.
This template is built for HR professionals and People leaders who feel the mood shifting but lack hard data to act on. It speaks directly to HR directors and HR teams at companies with 200 to 2,000 employees who need board-ready evidence, not guesswork.
Most HR teams feel disengagement before they can prove it. Slack channels go quieter, town hall participation drops, and high performers start looking distracted. The problem is not awareness; it is the absence of structured data that lets HR directors make informed decisions with confidence.
Pulse delivers a complete, single-page assessment funnel built around a 50/50 split-screen layout. Every scroll section is purposeful, moving the visitor from curiosity to commitment in three clearly defined steps. The template includes all the visual components, copy structure, and interactive elements needed to collect responses and convert HR leaders into platform users.




Theme
Directory & Discovery
Creative direction
Step-by-Step Guide
Color system
Navy Authority
Style
Split Screen (50/50)
Direction
Quiz/Assessment
Page Sections
Split-screen Hero with Scorecard Preview
Three-step Assessment Scroll Journey
Inline Quiz and Assessment Modal
Sticky Bottom Call-to-action Bar
Logo Bar Header and Social Proof Section
Scroll-linked Animations and Spotlight Effects
What kind of organization is this template designed for?
Does the assessment support anonymous responses?
How many questions does the inline assessment include?
Can this template support ongoing pulse surveys, not just a one-time assessment?
What is included in the action playbook step?
The hero opens with a 50/50 split layout. The left panel carries the headline "How Healthy Is Your Company Culture, Really?" against deep command navy (#0B1D3A), anchored by a single high-contrast "Score My Organization" button. The right panel shows a stylized engagement scorecard with radial charts and letter grades, rendered close enough to read but just blurred enough to pull visitors forward. This design choice immediately communicates what the employee engagement survey produces, making the value tangible before a single question is answered.
Each scroll section reveals one phase of the assessment. Step 1 shows a question card interface mockup for the 12-question employee survey. Step 2 displays a scoring animation preview that surfaces the engagement risk score and escalates the stakes around employee retention and cultural debt. Step 3 previews the downloadable PDF action playbook alongside retention cost framing. This progressive structure mirrors best practices for conducting employee engagement surveys: keep it short, make the stakes visible, and reward completion with something actionable.
The primary conversion path opens inline. Visitors answer role title first, then company size, then five Likert-scale culture questions designed to feel fast. The questions cover core drivers including workload management, manager support, psychological safety, and career growth, which are the same indicators that separate employees who feel valued from those who are quietly planning to leave. A progress bar indicates how much of the survey remains, reducing drop-off. No email is requested until the final screen, where a work email unlocks the score and playbook.
After the second scroll section, a sticky bottom bar appears carrying the "Score My Organization" call to action. This keeps the primary conversion button visible without interrupting the reading experience. A secondary path, "See a Sample Report," gives less-committed visitors an alternative click that captures intent for retargeting without requiring full commitment from the visitor.
The header includes a scrolling strip of recognizable enterprise brand logos positioned above the bold headline, signaling that serious organizations already use the platform. A dedicated social proof section lower on the page features enterprise testimonials from HR directors alongside a logo bar and retention cost metrics. This combination helps HR professionals trust the platform before they enter a single response.
The template uses scroll-linked word reveals, counter animations, and spotlight card effects to make each section feel alive and purposeful. Sections load progressively so the employee experience of moving through the page mirrors the experience of completing a well-paced engagement survey. The animation logic uses server-side rendering for static sections and client components for the quiz and interactive elements.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Logo Bar Header | Builds instant trust with enterprise-logo social proof and bold headline |
| Hero Split Screen | Introduces the assessment call to action alongside a blurred scorecard preview |
| Step 1: Answer Questions | Shows the 12-question employee survey card interface mockup |
| Step 2: Risk Score | Previews the scoring animation and escalates retention stakes |
| Step 3: Action Playbook | Reveals the downloadable PDF and frames retention cost urgency |
| Social Proof Strip | Delivers HR director testimonials and enterprise logo bar |
| Sticky call to action Bar | Keeps the primary conversion button visible after scroll two |
| Linear Footer | Closes with a clean single-row footer pattern |
The visual identity follows a Directory and Discovery theme designed to feel like the executive floor of a serious organization. Every color and typographic choice reinforces authority, precision, and trust. The palette is called Navy Authority, and it earns that name.
The template is built desktop-first because HR directors typically review scorecard data on wide screens where the split-screen layout and radial chart details are most readable. Full mobile responsiveness is included so that employee survey participants who access the assessment from a smartphone can complete it without difficulty.
The Pulse template is engineered around a single conversion goal: get an HR director to complete the assessment and enter a work email in exchange for their engagement risk score and playbook. Every design decision serves that goal.
This template is purpose-built for the employee engagement platform category and draws on established best practices for survey design, landing page conversion, and HR intelligence presentation. The following context points are useful for anyone evaluating this template against other employee survey templates or engagement survey options.