Newsroom
Platform

Offshore Hub news rebuilt with stronger articles, images and a cleaner reading experience

The news section has been rebuilt to feel more like a focused offshore industry desk and less like a small blog feed.

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Article overview

The news section has been rebuilt to feel more like a focused offshore industry desk and less like a small blog feed.

Focus area: Source network.

Source context: Offshore Hub.

Designed to support the live Offshore Hub job engine and source-first publishing model.

Offshore Hub has rebuilt the news section so it can support proper articles, not just short platform notes. The goal is simple: every news item should have a reason to exist. A story should explain a product improvement, a new source, a workflow change or a practical point for offshore candidates and employers. This makes the section more useful for people who return to the site regularly and want to understand what has changed since their last visit.

The rebuilt news desk gives Offshore Hub a stronger editorial layer alongside the live job engine.
The rebuilt news desk gives Offshore Hub a stronger editorial layer alongside the live job engine.

A clearer article format

The new format supports a larger hero image, lead text, article metadata, image captions, quote blocks and related stories. This gives each article a stronger rhythm and makes longer updates easier to read. Instead of placing all text in one heavy block, articles can now be broken into sections with visual breathing room. The result is a layout that feels closer to a maritime trade publication than a basic project log.

This also helps Offshore Hub explain development decisions more clearly. When the job cards, filters, source labels or mobile layout change, the news section can describe what was improved and why it matters. That matters because a specialist job site should build trust through transparency. Users should not have to guess whether the site is active or whether the data model is being improved.

A news item should either inform, explain or document a real improvement. If it does none of those things, it does not belong on the front page.

The updated news page also gives the most important story more space while keeping the rest of the feed compact. Readers can scan the latest updates, open a full article, jump back to all news or move directly to the live jobs page. That connection between news and jobs is important: the news section should support the job engine, not compete with it.

Use the article with the live job engine.

Read the platform updates, then scan current offshore, wind, fishing and maritime opportunities.

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