---
title: 'Scalable Success: Enterprise Web Development with SE Studio'
description: >-
  What enterprise web development actually demands: scalable architecture, real
  CMS flexibility, and a studio that understands complex technical challenges.
date: '2026-02-01'
author: Nick
category: Blog
canonical_url: https://www.se.studio/blog/enterprise-web-development-with-se-studio/
source: Something Else
license: © 2026 Something Else. All rights reserved.
slug: enterprise-web-development-with-se-studio
id: iewLv7uMZ4G6gecmNq6Re
contentType: article
---

# Scalable Success: Enterprise Web Development with SE Studio

*Nick*

![Enterprise Web development and scale blog visual](https://images.ctfassets.net/g0pw3n92bre6/lNIlgGP5G29B9g23sLwi5/ddbbf9641c8cdfcf96a7476e8abd7ab0/Frame_2018781195_1.jpg)

### Migrating with Minimal Risk

With scale comes complexity - often stemming from high volumes of content, multi- level integrations, and the need to keep a live site running throughout a rebuild.

A standard website might have fewer pages but roughly the same number of page types. Enterprise sites invert that ratio: hundreds of page types, each with their own content relationships, redirects, and dependencies.

Our rebuild of the **HopSkipDrive** website is a useful example. HopSkipDrive is a US-based tech company transforming school transportation - their existing site had grown to over 570 pages, with more than 400 blog posts and a content team that published continuously. The new site couldn't simply replace the old one; it had to be built in parallel, go live cleanly, and immediately deliver measurable improvement.

"We recommended Next.js on Netlify for the rebuild - a combination that handles the performance demands of a large content site while integrating cleanly with the headless CMS. The result was a 46% increase in operational efficiency, delivered without a single day of downtime during the transition."

Migrating the blog archive was the most technically demanding part. Moving 400+ posts isn't a copy-paste operation - each one had to be checked for metadata integrity, URL structure, redirect mapping, and CMS compatibility. We built an automated migration pipeline to handle the volume while preserving every piece of content's SEO history.

### Speedy Frameworks

Next.js and TypeScript have become the industry standard for enterprise web development, and they've earned that status. Next.js handles the server-side rendering and static generation that large content sites need for performance.

TypeScript catches errors before they reach production. Together they make a codebase maintainable at the kind of scale where multiple developers are working across the same project over months or years.

Integration is the other reason these frameworks dominate. Modern enterprise sites don't exist in isolation - they connect to CRMs, analytics platforms, headless CMSs, payment systems, and internal tools. A framework that makes those integrations clean and reliable isn't a technical preference, it's a business requirement.

### AI-Assisted Development

AI has changed the economics of several tasks that used to eat significant developer time - automated accessibility audits, content migration scripts, repetitive component generation, and test coverage. We use AI tooling across these workflows to move faster and catch more.

"What AI accelerates, human judgement still has to direct. As development speed increases, architectural decisions become more consequential, not less. The engineers who deliver the best outcomes are the ones who can move fast and think clearly about what they're building."

The skill hasn't diminished - it's shifted. Writing the right prompt, reviewing the output, understanding when to accept it and when to override it: that's the craft now.

### What a Well-Built Enterprise Site Delivers

When done right, an enterprise website stops being a cost and becomes a competitive asset. It loads fast, scales without re-architecture, integrates with the tools your team already uses, and gives your content team the confidence to publish without engineering support.

HopSkipDrive's new site does all of those things. But the principle holds across every enterprise build: the best technology decisions are the ones you stop having to think about.



***About the piece: ****Article by Nick Randell, co-founder at SE Studio, a branding, design and technology agency based in London and San Francisco. *

- [A Designers Perspective: Freedom Within the Guideline](/blog/a-designers-perspective-freedom-within-the-guideline/)
- [The Art of Engagement: Building Meaningful Content](/blog/the-art-of-engagement-building-meaningful-content/)
- [How We Decide When New Technology Is Worth Using (And When It's Not)](/blog/how-we-decide-when-new-technology-is-worth-using/)
- [Pursuing The Creative In Branding](/blog/pursuing-the-creative-in-branding/)
- [How We Rebuilt HopSkipDrive's 570-Page Website Without Breaking a Thing](/blog/the-story-behind-hopskipdrives-website-transformation/)
- [How We Built a Fintech Brand Identity for a Hedge Fund's Spinout](/blog/how-we-built-a-fintech-brand-identity-for-a-hedge-fund's-spinout/)
- [Why Healthcare Brands Have to Work Harder Than Any Other](/blog/why-healthcare-brands-have-to-work-harder-than-any-other/)

