SBN Website Optimization:
Secondary Pages & Site Architecture Audit

Overview

A full audit of savedbynature.org’s navigation and secondary pages reveals two compounding structural problems: a navigation architecture too complex for visitors to use effectively, and functional infrastructure that visitors cannot find because of where it is buried.

The site has no Contact page anywhere in its navigation. A fully functional e-commerce store and an active event calendar both exist — and both are hidden inside a secondary dropdown that most visitors would have no reason to open. Multiple pages serve content that their URLs do not describe, signalling to visitors and search engines alike that the site was not built with either audience in mind.

Navigation Architecture

Top-Level Structure

The top-level navigation contains five items: HOME, PROGRAMS, WHAT’S NEW?, GET INVOLVED, and ABOUT. There is no Contact option at any level of the navigation — not as a top-level item, not within any dropdown, and not within any of the five sections.

The two most prominent interactive elements in the header are the DONATE and MEMBERSHIP (optional) buttons in the top right corner — financial actions that appear before a visitor has engaged with any content.

Screenshot of the savedbynature.org header and top-level navigation in July 2025, showing the Saved By Nature circular logo on the left featuring a hawk in flight against a sunset sky with the tagline "Experience the Change." Five navigation items are displayed across the center: HOME, PROGRAMS (highlighted in orange), WHAT'S NEW?, GET INVOLVED, and ABOUT. In the top-right corner, two prominent orange pill-shaped buttons read DONATE and MEMBERSHIP (optional). A shopping bag icon sits to the left of the buttons. The navigation bar is white with a dark teal browser chrome showing the URL savedbynature.org.
The savedbynature.org header in July 2025 — five top-level navigation items with no Contact option at any level, and two financial CTAs (DONATE and MEMBERSHIP) as the most prominent interactive elements in the header. A visitor arriving to learn about programs or ask a question encounters financial asks before engaging with any content.

The GET INVOLVED Dropdown

The GET INVOLVED dropdown contains six items: Donate, Membership, Volunteer, Corporate Matching, Donor-Advised Funds, and Sponsor. Five of the six are financial asks. The sixth — Volunteer — asks visitors to contribute their time. None of the six serve a visitor looking to participate in a program.

The label “GET INVOLVED” implies participation. The content delivers only financial and volunteer contribution options. For a visitor arriving with program-seeking intent, this dropdown offers nothing relevant.

Screenshot of savedbynature.org in July 2025 with the GET INVOLVED dropdown expanded, revealing six items listed vertically: Donate, Membership, Volunteer, Corporate Matching, Donor-Advised Funds, and Sponsor. The dropdown overlays the homepage, which shows a partially visible headline reading "501(c)(3) nonprofit organiza[tion since] 2019," an UPCOMING EVENTS section with a "No events at the moment" message, and a Golden Gate Bridge panoramic image in the footer area. The DONATE and MEMBERSHIP (optional) orange buttons remain visible in the top-right corner.
The GET INVOLVED dropdown in July 2025 — six options, five of which are financial asks and one of which asks for volunteer time. A visitor arriving with program-seeking intent finds no pathway to participation here. The label implies involvement; the content requests contribution.

The WHAT'S NEW? Dropdown

The WHAT’S NEW? dropdown contains three items: Calendar, Awards, and Shop.

Two of these — Calendar and Shop — are fully functional systems with genuine utility for visitors. A working event calendar and a complete e-commerce store are both accessible only through this dropdown. Neither is signalled by the label “WHAT’S NEW?” and neither would be found by a visitor who did not already know to look there.

Screenshot of savedbynature.org in July 2025 with the WHAT'S NEW? dropdown expanded, revealing three items: Calendar, Awards, and Shop. The dropdown overlays the homepage, which shows a partially visible headline reading "501(c)(3) nonpro[fit organiz]ation since 2019," an UPCOMING EVENTS 2025 section with a "No events at the moment" message, and a Golden Gate Bridge panoramic image in the lower portion of the page. The DONATE and MEMBERSHIP (optional) orange buttons remain visible in the top-right corner.
The WHAT'S NEW? dropdown in July 2025 — three items, two of which (Calendar and Shop) are fully functional systems with genuine utility for visitors. Neither is suggested by the label "WHAT'S NEW?" and neither would be found by a visitor who did not already know to look here.

The ABOUT Dropdown

The ABOUT dropdown contains four items: Our Story, Staff and Volunteers, Board, and Community Partners.

Screenshot of savedbynature.org in July 2025 with the ABOUT dropdown expanded, revealing four items: Our Story, Staff and Volunteers, Board, and Community Partners. The dropdown overlays the homepage, which shows a partially visible headline reading "501(c)(3) nonprofit organization since [2019]," an UPCOMING EVENTS 2025 section with a "No events at the moment" message, and a Golden Gate Bridge panoramic image in the lower portion of the page. The DONATE and MEMBERSHIP (optional) orange buttons remain visible in the top-right corner.
The ABOUT dropdown in July 2025 — four items covering organizational identity and personnel. No contact option appears here or anywhere else in the navigation.

Buried Functional Systems

The Calendar

The calendar page at savedbynature.org/calendar is functional. It displays a standard monthly grid with real, populated events for July 2025. The entries visible in the screenshot include the 6th Annual Inclusive Nature Hike on July 13th, a Seniors Hike entry on July 16th, and an Alviso Adobe entry on July 19th.

This is operational infrastructure. Events are being added, dates are current, and the calendar renders correctly. It is accessible only via the WHAT’S NEW? dropdown — a navigation label that gives no indication a calendar exists within it.

A Widget Didn’t Load error is visible in the right sidebar, consistent with other pages across the site.

Screenshot of the Calendar page at savedbynature.org/calendar in July 2025, showing a standard monthly grid view for July 2025 with the timezone set to GMT+04:00. The page header features a mountain sunset hero image with "CALENDAR" in large white text. Three populated events are visible: an Independence Day entry on Friday July 4th, a "7:00pm Free..." event on Saturday July 5th, a "6th Annual Inc..." entry on Sunday July 13th, a "Seniors Hike f..." entry on Wednesday July 16th with a "9:00pm Cay..." secondary entry the same day, and an "Alviso Adobe..." entry on Saturday July 19th. A "Widget Didn't Load" error indicator is visible in the bottom-right sidebar. The browser address bar shows savedbynature.org/calendar and the page tab reads "Calendar | Saved By Nature."
The Calendar page at savedbynature.org/calendar in July 2025 — a fully functional event calendar with real, current entries including the 6th Annual Inclusive Nature Hike, a Seniors Hike, and an Alviso Adobe event. Operational infrastructure, actively maintained, and accessible only by opening the WHAT'S NEW? dropdown and knowing to look there.

The Shop

The shop at savedbynature.org is a fully functional e-commerce store. Four products are visible in the screenshot: an SBN-branded T-shirt and three Bay Area nature guides. The checkout page shows a complete purchase flow with PayPal and Venmo express checkout options, a customer details form, delivery calculation, and a secure checkout indicator.

One discrepancy is visible between the two screenshots: the T-shirt is priced at $27.00 on the product listing page and $28.00 in the order summary on the checkout page.

The shop is accessible only via the WHAT’S NEW? dropdown — the same navigation label that contains the calendar and an Awards page. A visitor looking to purchase SBN merchandise or nature guides would have no obvious route to this page.

Screenshot of the Shop page at savedbynature.org/shop-nonprofits in July 2025, showing the WHAT'S NEW? dropdown open with Shop highlighted in orange. The page displays four products beneath a bird-in-flight hero image with "SHOP" in large white text: an SBN Fish in the Forest Unisex T-shirt priced at $27.00, a Local Butterfly Pocket Guide – San Francisco Bay Area at $11.95, a Local Birds Pocket Guide – San Francisco Bay Area at $11.95, and Tracks North America at $11.95. A Widget Didn't Load error is visible in the bottom-right sidebar.
The SBN Shop in July 2025 — a fully functional e-commerce store with four products, accessible only by opening the WHAT'S NEW? dropdown. No navigation label signals that a shop exists here.
Screenshot of the checkout page at savedbynature.org/checkout in July 2025, showing an Express Checkout section with PayPal Checkout and Venmo Checkout buttons, a customer details form with fields for Email, First name, Last name, and Phone, and a Delivery details section below. The order summary panel on the right shows 1 item — SBN Fish in the Forest Unisex T-shirt — priced at $28.00, with delivery at $9.99, Sales Tax at $0.00, and a Total of $37.99. A Secure Checkout indicator appears below the order summary. A Widget Didn't Load error is visible in the bottom-right sidebar.
The SBN checkout page in July 2025 — a complete purchase flow with PayPal and Venmo express checkout, a full customer details form, and a Secure Checkout indicator. The T-shirt appears here at $28.00, a $1.00 discrepancy from the $27.00 listed on the product page.

Missing Infrastructure

No Contact Page

A complete review of all five top-level navigation items and their dropdowns confirms that no Contact page exists anywhere on the site. The navigation contains no contact option — not as a standalone page, not embedded within ABOUT, and not within GET INVOLVED.

The only contact information on the entire site is a phone number and physical address in the site footer, presented as organizational credentials rather than as a participant or professional contact pathway.

Healthcare providers seeking to refer patients to the Seniors Hike for Health program, probation officers seeking reentry programming, social workers identifying youth outdoor programs, and community members wanting to ask a question before joining a hike all encounter the same outcome: no contact pathway exists.

Screenshot of the savedbynature.org site-wide footer showing the only contact information on the entire site: phone number (408) 627-2760, physical address at 2772 Joseph Ave #4 Campbell CA 95008, and Tuesday–Saturday 9am–5:30pm PST hours, displayed as organisational credentials beneath the Spark Good Round Up widget. A red arrow annotation points to the contact details. This footer appears across all pages of the site. No contact page existed in the navigation and no contact form existed anywhere on the site.
The site-wide footer — the only location on the entire savedbynature.org website where a phone number appeared. No contact page existed in the navigation. No contact form existed on any page. A visitor wanting to ask how to join a program, or a professional seeking to refer a client, would need to scroll to the very bottom of any page and read the footer carefully to find this number.

URL-Content Mismatches

The URL savedbynature.org/copy-of-donate serves the Community Partners page. The URL describes a donation page duplicate; the content is an entirely different section of the site.

This mismatch creates two problems. For visitors, a URL that does not describe its content is disorienting — particularly for anyone who bookmarks pages, shares links, or returns to the site via browser history. For search engines, a URL signal and page content that contradict each other undermine how the page is indexed and how it ranks for relevant queries.

This is not an isolated instance. The Youth Environmental & Social Justice program page, documented in the Programs audit, was published at savedbynature.org/copy-of-outdoor-access-for-at-promise — another exposed staging URL serving live content.

Screenshot of savedbynature.org/copy-of-donate displaying the Community Partners page — showing a hero image of SBN participants on a group hike with "Community Partners" text overlay, and partner logos for Open Space Authority, Boys & Girls Clubs of Silicon Valley, and REI Co-op below. Two red arrow annotations point to the URL bar and to the page title, highlighting the mismatch between the URL (which describes a donation page duplicate) and the content being served. Widget Didn't Load error visible in the right sidebar.
savedbynature.org/copy-of-donate serving the Community Partners page. The URL describes a staging duplicate of the Donate page; the content is an entirely different section of the site. For any visitor who bookmarked this page, shared the link, or arrived via browser history — and for every search engine indexing it — the signal was the same: this page was never properly published.

Overall Assessment

DimensionAssessmentNotes
Navigation Architecture🔴 Poor5 top-level items; no Contact; WHAT'S NEW? label obscures functional systems
Contact Infrastructure🔴 Critical gapNo contact page exists anywhere in the site
Functional System Accessibility🔴 PoorWorking calendar and e-commerce store buried under WHAT'S NEW?
URL-Content Consistency🔴 PoorMultiple confirmed mismatches between URL and page content
GET INVOLVED Structure🟠 Misaligned6 financial/volunteer options; zero program participation pathways
Technical Stability🔴 PoorWidget Didn't Load errors visible across multiple pages

The site’s navigation architecture creates a consistent pattern: functional systems that visitors need are inaccessible without prior knowledge of where to look, and the infrastructure that would convert visitor interest into action — a contact page, program enrollment pathways, visible calendar access — does not exist or cannot be found.

This audit reflects the observed state of savedbynature.org navigation and secondary pages as of July 2025. All findings are grounded in visual and structural review of the website at the time, and are captured in page screenshots. No third-party analytics data has been incorporated into this assessment.