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7 Digital Annual Reports We Love

Looking to create a better digital annual report? From healthcare institutions to nonprofits, these annual report websites offer great lessons in storytelling, strategy and design.

A person holding a tablet displaying a webpage titled "Advancing Cancer Health Equity" featuring a smiling adult and child. Surrounding the tablet are office items like a clipboard, cup of tea, and stationery on a beige surface.

By Katie Bridges

Every year, organizations everywhere aim to take an innovative approach to the same challenge: turning a year’s worth of work into a story worth reading. Annual reports are essential, as they communicate the year’s successes, explain to donors how their gifts are being used and, most importantly, inspire future giving.

But good digital annual reports go beyond that, and really good ones engage the reader through compelling stories, captivating design and thoughtful interactivity, all while showcasing the organization’s culture and embodying its vision.

Looking for some ideas you can use for your next report? Here are seven of the best digital examples (including some we designed) — and what you can learn from them.

AstraZeneca

Lesson: Let design guide the story — then offer easy off-ramps for deeper dives.

AstraZeneca’s annual report makes a powerful first impression with a long-scrolling landing page that’s visually striking but never overwhelming. Crisp white space sets the tone, allowing bursts of bold color, animated illustrations and key stats to pop. The design smartly juxtaposes the microscopic world of science (cells, genes, tissues) with the broad global impact on patients and communities. Structured around six core themes, the site offers clear paths to deeper content, including videos, analysis and a link to the full report. It’s a thoughtful, user-friendly approach that balances storytelling and substance

The Takeaway: Use your landing page to distill the essentials. With the right structure and visuals, even a complex report can feel clean, focused and accessible.

Rutgers Cancer Institute

Lesson: A digital-first report doesn’t just save paper — it elevates the experience.

The Cancer Health Equity Center of Excellence, a partnership between the Rutgers Cancer Institute and the Rutgers School of Public Health, was looking to evolve its impact report to provide a more interactive and engaging experience for readers. Traditionally, the report commemorates groundbreaking advancements made at Rutgers and demonstrates the center’s dedication to cancer health equity through research, community outreach, training and education. The Rutgers team partnered with C/A to introduce a digital-first format instead of the traditional print and digital PDF approach.

The Takeaway: Incorporating interactive elements like maps, timelines, slideshows and animated statistics ensures that your annual report not only communicates achievements but also visually engages readers, making complex accomplishments easy to understand.

Girls Who Code

Lesson: Who says you can’t have fun?

As an organization created to close the gender gap and attract young women to the field of tech, it’s essential to have a well-designed and contemporary website, and an extremely of-the-moment brand — it’s also vital that both attributes are reflected in the organization’s annual report. We appreciate how Girls Who Code’s digital annual report serves as an effective extension of the brand: It’s cool, colorful and uber-appealing to a young audience, and it offers a smooth user experience. Design elements from the primary website find their way into the report’s design, keeping things consistent, clear, meaningful and thoroughly engaging.

The Takeaway: Allow your brand’s joie de vivre to shine through, choosing thoughtful design elements that create a consistent experience.

The Southwestern Medical Foundation

Lesson: Display copy and visuals can turn a single page into a rich narrative.

Southwestern Medical Foundation had a two-pronged goal when it came to its annual report: create a digital experience that was not only visually engaging but also streamlined for ease of consumption. In other words, the report should be concise and skimmable. C/A helped the team highlight the year’s impactful moments with bold headlines and data-driven content, prioritizing clarity and engagement over traditional longform narratives. The result is a single-page scroll experience, featuring minimal text, dynamic infographics and videos and strategically placed links for readers to delve deeper into the organization’s impact.

The Takeaway: You don’t need thousands of words to tell a rich, impactful story about your organization’s accomplishments. Concise, compelling copy, video, animated graphics and the like can do a lot of the storytelling work for you.

Abramson Cancer Center

Lesson: Big stories deserve bold formats.

In honor of its 50th anniversary, Abramson Cancer Center, a global leader in cancer care, research and education, decided to go digital for the first time with its annual report, Creativity, Collaboration & Community. The organization wanted a platform where it could share some of its storied history, along with its half-a-century of progress and prospects for the future, so C/A helped its team create a multifaceted, digital “magazine” through which it could tell comprehensive stories on topics such as “Cancer & Covid-19,” “Immunotherapy: The Future of Medicine” and “Philanthropy: Energizing Our Mission.” With striking design, embedded video and myriad content types, including Q&As, personal profiles and an interactive map featuring all of the center’s locations, the result is an evergreen portrayal that will serve the organization for years to come.

The Takeaway: A digital report can handle rich, multifaceted content — from personal profiles to interactive maps — while still feeling cohesive, navigable and visually compelling.

Boston University

Lesson: Lead with curiosity — and reader interest.

In its annual report last year, Boston University centered its content around big questions that folks at the school are working to answer: Can we change faster than the climate? Can we hardwire happiness? It shares admission statistics, grant awards and financial information too, of course, but the rich, answer-seeking content takes center stage. With absorbing articles like “Batteries, Reinvented” and “This Device Could Save Your Life,” the report is a fresh and lively read for anyone interested in higher education.

The Takeaway: Organize the sections of your report in a way that piques reader interest and also clearly sets expectations.

Silicon Valley Community Foundation

Lesson: A dynamic blend of formats keeps readers moving.

When it came time to create its annual report, Silicon Valley Community Foundation knew it wanted to feature personal stories about community members, donors and partners, along with the work the organization has been doing to drive it closer to its vision of an equitable, economically secure future for all Silicon Valley residents. Mixing infographics and slideshows with short- and long-form content, the report showcases the impact the foundation makes on the region. Bright, branded colors catch the eye as users scroll, and a separate By The Numbers page gives the data its own chance to shine.

The Takeaway: Not everything needs to be (or should be) long-form content. Break up your annual report into a variety of bite-sized, scannable chunks of content to sustain reader interest and engagement.

Rethink Your Annual Report

We can help you create an engaging and interactive report that performs.

Get in touch

A person with blonde, wavy hair and glasses is smiling while sitting at a table. They are wearing a dark, knitted sweater in a casual indoor setting. The image is in black and white.
Katie Bridges Managing Editor

Katie has almost a decade of editorial experience, spending most of those years as an editor at regional magazines. A Georgetown University grad, she helps guide digital and print content programs from concept to completion for C/A clients such as Vanderbilt Health, Niagara Falls USA and Phoenix Children’s Hospital Foundation. She has written for Garden & Gun, Washingtonian and Arkansas Life, among others.

The mother of two young girls, Katie can most often be found on a hiking trail with her family (Sedona’s a favorite). She’s a Southerner through and through, and the only member of the C/A team who uses the word “y’all” with abandon.

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