Marcus M. Keupp is a scientist and political commentator who does public speaking and international media appearances. His website has a focused job: give people who see him on television, YouTube, or in the press one clear place to learn more and make contact.
Many visitors arrive with context. They may have seen an interview or heard his commentary already. The website gives them the current media, speaking, and background information they still need.
A credible page without a long build
Marcus wanted something sharp, fast to set up, and easy to update without a developer. Solo reduced the build to the pieces that mattered: a credible profile, clear structure, and simple editing.
He also noted that he supports open source architectures, which made a Mozilla-connected tool feel like a natural fit.
The outcome
Marcus reported that he regularly receives inquiries for additional public speaking opportunities. For a public expert, that is a strong signal. The site gives attention from interviews, articles, and videos somewhere useful to land.
I needed something that looked cool, was easy and fast to set up and required absolutely no tech skills.
A landing page for outside attention
Public speakers often have scattered proof: interviews, talks, articles, conference listings, and videos that live on other platforms. A personal site does not need to replace all of that. It needs to organize it enough that a producer, organizer, or journalist can move from recognition to action.
The page can stay lean because the visitor’s question is direct: is this the right person to contact?
For media and speaking inquiries, the visitor usually needs enough context to verify credibility, then a clear next step. Solo helped Marcus put that path in one place.
The strongest version of this site stays focused. It does not need to tell every story from his career; it needs to make the next inquiry easier.
The site also gives Marcus control over the first impression after someone finds him elsewhere. Search results, clips, and articles can point in different directions; the website brings the professional context back to one place.
See the live website at Marcus M. Keupp.



