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How a German cancer research network built a clearer public site

Pooria Arab2 min read

Content is AI-assisted and may include links to our partners.

Cancer cell research illustration used by the TACTIC project | Solo AI website creator

TACTIC is a German research network focused on cancer transcriptional dependencies. The consortium brings together labs working on RNA splicing kinases, chromatin remodelers, protein-interaction domains, and other preclinical research areas.

That kind of work needs a public site that is easy to navigate. Researchers, collaborators, and industry partners need to understand what the network does without reading a grant document first.

A technical story with a public front door

The TACTIC team chose Solo because the site was easy to build, easy to edit, and supported by responsive customer support. The team called out the graphics, interface, and overall look as useful parts of the process.

The result is a site that can introduce the consortium, explain its research focus, and point academic collaborators toward technologies available for translational studies.

TACTIC consortium map showing research locations across Germany | Solo AI website creator
The project needed to explain a national research network without burying visitors in detail.

A site the team can keep updating

For a research network, the launch is only the first step. The useful part is having a site the team can maintain as collaborations, tools, and study areas develop.

Solo gave TACTIC a public site that can stay understandable while the science remains complex.

TACTIC technologies diagram for transcriptional dependency research | Solo AI website creator
A technical project benefits from visuals that organize the work quickly.

The goal of the network is to bring together all the necessary technologies and expertise for preclinical small molecule development.

Making collaboration easier to understand

TACTIC’s audience is not one group. Academic collaborators, industry partners, and people adjacent to the research all need different levels of detail. The site gives the project a common front door before those conversations become more specialized.

That matters for a consortium. When several labs and technologies sit under one initiative, the website has to reduce confusion. It does not need to explain every scientific detail on the first screen. It needs to show what the network is, why the work exists, and where a collaborator can go next.

A public layer for specialized work

The site does not replace papers, grant material, or direct scientific collaboration. It gives the network a public layer that is easier to share before those deeper materials are needed.

For TACTIC, that public layer is useful because the project spans multiple labs and technologies. A clear website helps keep the first explanation consistent.

See the live website at TACTIC-DKH Project.

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