In Solan, Himachal Pradesh, 79-year-old Karnail Singh starts his day before sunrise in the little dairy shed that now sustains his livelihood. His income has risen slowly, animal by animal, through steady and quiet persistence. This is what NGOs do each day. They make small, steady changes that affect farms, classrooms, clinics, rivers, and self-help groups.
Yet how these stories travel matters too. In a world shaped by scrolling and short attention spans, long, text-heavy PDFs often fail to reach people. That is where digital-first reporting steps in, helping real work meet real audiences in more immediate and engaging ways.
So, let’s take a look at a few organisations that have embraced this shift and are thinking outside the box, approaching their annual reports with creativity and care.
AVPN – Annual Review 2024–25
AVPN is the largest network of social investors in Asia, connecting policy makers, foundations, family offices and the private sector to accelerate capital towards closing SDG gaps across the region.
Its Annual Review 2024–25 is a visual experience before it is a report. The opening animation brings the title alive through a spreading collage of photographs, immediately setting a cinematic tone.
AVPN’s Annual Review 2024–25 is a visual experience before it is a report.
The page stays still as you scroll, and the words slowly appear in place, giving the reading rhythm a feeling of floating. Bold colours, fluid transitions and layered motion run through every section. The regional map uses intelligent micro-interactions, with soft percentage bubbles that reveal regional leaders’ messages on hover.
Vision, Catalyst and Knowledge sections feature silent video portraits that open into full YouTube stories. Even the ‘Impact Highlights’ play with motion, as scrambled words resolve into meaning. What elevates it further is how faithfully this entire animated experience translates to mobile, preserving pace, colour and interaction beautifully.
UNICEF – Annual Report 2024
UNICEF works across more than 190 countries to protect children’s rights, health, education and safety, shaping some of the world’s most large-scale humanitarian and development efforts.
Its 2024 Annual Report is built directly into the main website and embraces quiet clarity over visual spectacle. The design feels clean and restrained: black text on white, quiet soft blue highlights, and a readable typeface that keeps attention on the content.
UNICEF’s 2024 Annual Report is built directly into the main website and embraces quiet clarity over visual spectacle.
The experience opens with a strong visual cue and right away offers language options, so it feels globally accessible from the scroll. As you move down, achievements appear in short text blocks with photography and clear statistics, shaped for quick scanning on mobile.
Sections like Top 10 Achievements, Voices of Youth Advocates, and Financials sit neatly inside modular panels. Subtle motion appears only where needed, with gentle text reveals drifting over images. The downloadable PDF exists, but it feels secondary. This is a report designed first for screens, and it shows.
Ambuja’s Video Annual Report 2024–25
Ambuja Foundation works with rural communities across India on water, agriculture, health, education, skilling and women’s empowerment, treating poverty as a set of connected challenges rather than isolated issues.
Its 2024–25 annual report, produced by Simit Bhagat Studios, takes the form of a quiet, carefully paced video, built around a puzzle metaphor. Each focus area appears as a separate piece with its own icon, colour and rhythm.
Ambuja Foundation’s each focus area appears as a separate puzzle piece with its own icon, colour and rhythm.
As the video progresses, the pieces slide together, showing how different programmes strengthen one another rather than standing alone. The motion graphics stay calm and precise, with beneficiaries held in colour against softer backgrounds so that faces remain central.
There is no voiceover, which makes the story easy to follow without language barriers. Text, numbers and images work together to carry meaning. As a companion to the print report, this video feels like a more accessible doorway into the same story of slow, stitched, rural change.
The Nature Conservancy – 2024 Annual / Impact Report
The Nature Conservancy is a global environmental nonprofit working across 83 countries to protect land, water and biodiversity so that people and nature can thrive together.
Its 2024 Impact Report opens with a simple but striking visual, a colourful illustrated landscape of mountains, rivers and stone, setting a calm, hopeful tone. The design stays clean and restrained throughout, with a white background, green accents and crisp black text.
The Nature Conservancy’s 2024 Impact Report opens with a simple but striking visual, a colourful illustrated landscape of mountains, rivers and stone, setting a calm, hopeful tone.
One of its most thoughtful interactions appears in the CEO message, where the photograph remains fixed on one side while the text scrolls beside it, creating a quiet sense of presence. The report then unfolds like a story of the year, moving through forests, wildlife and communities in connected chapters.
Sections expand gently for deeper reading, allowing complex conservation themes to stay accessible. Data, images and narratives are balanced carefully. The web report ends with a soft call to action (to donate) and the option to download the full PDF, including a Chinese edition.
DigDeep – 2024 Annual Report
DigDeep is a human rights nonprofit working to close the Water Gap in the United States, serving communities who still live without basic access to sinks, toilets and running water.
Its 2024 Annual Report opens like a film rather than a document. Moving footage of flowing water, open landscapes and everyday life fills the background, while the year “2024” appears in bold, with the zero replaced by the image of a woman and child.
DigDeep’s 2024 Annual Report opens like a film rather than a document. Moving footage of flowing water, open landscapes and everyday life fills the background.
Navigation is built for choice. A Donate button stays visible in the corner, while a simple menu lets you jump directly to different sections rather than scrolling endlessly.
As the footage shifts, the CEO’s voice note plays, turning the opening into something you both see and hear. Each section opens like its own page, with quotes, short video clips and audio messages from the field.
The mix of pastel colour blocks, photography and motion keeps the experience lively yet spacious. What lingers most is the use of sound as story, letting voices carry the impact.
Stories That Travel, In Every Form
Not every meaningful annual report needs animation, sound, or scrolling choreography. Sometimes, what holds a reader is not motion, but voice. Alongside these digital-first experiments, we also believe in the quiet power of well-written traditional reports.
If you would like to see how a print-led format can still feel personal and engaging, take a look at the annual report we created for Bright Orange Foundation. It reads like a conversation, guided by the founder’s voice with warmth and clarity.
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