IT Brief Australia - Technology news for CIOs & IT decision-makers
Australia
TechDay unveils major redesign across global network

TechDay unveils major redesign across global network

Wed, 6th May 2026 (Today)
Mark Tarre
MARK TARRE News Chief

TechDay has completed a major redesign across its global publishing network, introducing a cleaner, faster and more modern experience built to better showcase regional technology journalism.

The refreshed design puts greater focus on local stories, expert opinion, job moves, analyst insights, editorial visibility and content discovery across the network.

TechDay operates 61 specialist technology sites across 8 regions and has published more than 648,000 stories. The redesign reflects the scale of the network while creating a sharper, more content-led reader experience.

Sean Mitchell, Publisher at TechDay, said the project marks an important step in the company's continued investment in trusted, human-powered technology journalism.

"TechDay has grown into a significant global publishing network, but our focus has always remained the same: helping readers discover credible technology stories that are relevant to their region, industry and role," Mitchell said.

"This redesign gives our journalism the platform it deserves. It is cleaner, faster, easier to navigate and built around the reader."

The updated experience gives regional stories more prominence, making it easier for readers to find technology news and insights from their local markets. It also improves the presentation of specialist coverage across enterprise technology, cybersecurity, telecommunications, digital commerce, fintech, consumer technology and channel news.

Mitchell said the redesign goes beyond a visual refresh.

"This is not just a new look. It is a rebuild of the TechDay reader experience," he said.

"We want every story to be easier to find, easier to read and more engaging on the page. Strong journalism deserves strong presentation, and that has been central to this project."

The redesign includes major updates to homepages, media kits and team pages, with greater consistency across design, editorial pathways and visual storytelling.

Christian Santos has taken on the role of Visual Experience Designer as part of the project. His work focuses on improving layout, imagery, graphics and overall presentation across TechDay's sites.

"Christian's mission is to make TechDay's journalism look and feel as strong as the stories themselves," Mitchell said.

"We are investing in design because the way readers experience content matters. Better visuals, stronger layouts and clearer navigation all contribute to a more useful and memorable publishing experience."

The redesign also comes as AI, search and generative discovery reshape how audiences find information.

"As AI reshapes discovery, trusted human-powered journalism becomes even more important," Mitchell said.

"Our new design reflects that future: authoritative content, regional relevance and a reader experience built around quality."