https://www.americancityandcounty.com/wp-content/themes/acc_child/assets/images/logo/footer-logo.png
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Hybrid Work
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcast
  • Resources & Events
    • Back
    • Resources
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
    • IWCE 2022
    • How to Contribute
    • Municipal Cost Index – Archive
    • Equipment Watch Page
    • American City & County Awards
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Statement
    • Terms of Service
American City and County
  • NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Hybrid Work
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcasts
  • Resources/Events
    • Back
    • Webinars
    • White Papers/eBooks
    • IWCE 2022
    • How to Contribute
    • American City & County Awards
    • Municipal Cost Index
    • Equipment Watch Page
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Stament
    • Terms of Service
  • newsletter
  • Administration
  • Economy & Finance
  • Procurement
  • Public Safety
  • Public Works & Utilities
  • Smart Cities & Technology
  • Magazine
acc.com

News


News

2021 Crown Communities Award winner: Clark County Clerk Customer Service Website Redesign

2021 Crown Communities Award winner: Clark County Clerk Customer Service Website Redesign

  • Written by Michelle M. Havich
  • 25th January 2022

Clark County, Nevada, is the “Wedding Capital of the World,” with approximately 129,000 marriage licenses issued over the past two years, 80 percent for out-of-towners. “We do more destination weddings than any other place on the planet that we can find,” said Clark County Clerk Lynn Marie Goya. The county issue its 5-millionth marriage license this year, kicking off a series of year-long special events and promotions, with February 2022 being declared as Wedding Month.

In 2019, the County Fiscal Officers Association of Nevada (CFOA) was able to secure a steady source of technology funds, so the clerk’s office was able to develop Weddings.Vegas, an innovative website that serves as an information portal for getting married in the county. The site also serves as the Clark County Clerk’s official site, and incorporates other services offered by the office, and that is why the Clark County Clerk customer service website design was selected as one of American City & County’s 2021 Crown Communities Awards winners.

Previously, when potential brides and grooms would call the Clark County Clerk’s office to get information on licenses and getting married in the City of Las Vegas, the office would direct them to a URL that was long and clunky and hard to repeat over the phone, especially to couples calling internationally.

Also, people want more information than just how to get a marriage license. “What we find is that couples ask our clerks where they can go to get married and what to do while here, those kinds of questions. It’s not appropriate for government to provide that specific information, so what we really wanted to do is to help couples understand the whole process of coming to Clark County to get married.”

Weddings in Clark County are a $2.5 billion industry that employs more than 18,000 people and supports hundreds of businesses from independent photographers to the multi-billion-dollar resorts. “The design goal was to make it really simple, intuitive and beautiful so that people would get from images, as well as text, what it was like to get married here,” Goya said. “Sometimes I go down to talk to couples in the marriage license bureau as they’re waiting to get their license, and ‘fun’ is the number one word they use to say why they came to Las Vegas to get married. So, I think that the site reflects that is important.”

Weddings.Vegas is populated with beautiful images of local weddings of all varieties, from casual to more formal, making it attractive to a new generation of couples. It also has a chat feature to help couples directly. “Millennials are the biggest group, and we’re actually starting to see the post-Millennials” Goya said. “It was really important that it be a website that was attractive to them, that talked to their sensibilities and how they like to get information, rather than the older way that a typical government site would be laid out.”

The site is not just for wedding couples. While it offers marriage license applications and other wedding related services, it also features information on all the services the Clerk’s office offers, including proof of life verification, lobbyist registration, filing Fictitious Firm Name (FFN/DBA) certificates and public records request fulfillment for various boards and commissions, just in a more user friendly and up-to-date format.

“One of our other goals was to make it with a mobile-first design concept, because we know that close to 60 percent of our customers or visitors to our site do so on a mobile device, so it was important that it would lend itself well to different platforms and scalability, so that is still remains readable and easy to find the information,” Assistant Clark County Clerk Carl Bates added.

To promote the site as a portal for all county information, the Clerk’s office urges businesses to incorporate the simplified URL and a related QR code on all of their literature to make it easier for their customers. According to Goya, Clark County has around 3,500 marriage officiants and hundreds of small chapels. “We have a lot of conversations with them regularly,” she said. “This isn’t something we thought up and in six months we did it. It’s something that’s been in the planning stages for a few years.”

The Clerk’s office also works closely with the Wedding Chamber of Commerce, which vets companies to make sure they are bonded, hold a business license and are a legitimate business. “We are using their resources to focus on specific places, including photographer and other vendors,” Goya said.

A phase two for the site is currently in the planning stage that will expand services for the Clerk’s office into the site and have more functionality and full-service features into the site within the next six to eight months, according to Bates.

Tags: homepage-featured-1 homepage-featured-2 homepage-featured-4 Administration Economy News Public Works & Utilities Administration Economy Economy & Finance News Public Works & Utilities News

Most Recent


  • utilities
    Remote alarm notifications add firewall as utilities face mounting threats of cyberattacks
    Municipal utilities are critical to national security, economic stability, and public health and safety. As technology in these sectors evolves, cyberattackers take advantage of opportunities to exploit vulnerabilities. While the Federal Government has taken steps to address this issue by creating innovative public-private partnerships and initiatives, the worldwide attacks on municipal utilities in the past […]
  • 10 of America's most idyllic lakeside communities
    From Vermont’s Lake Champlain to the famous Lake of the Ozarks, the United States has the third most lakes of any country in the world—a new list from Boatline, an online boating marketplace, ranks America’s best lakeside cities and towns. The list includes communities like Grand Lake, Colo., which is home to the state’s deepest natural […]
  • infrastructure
    Infrastructure improvements in cities often feature clean energy or connected technologies
    The most in-demand products and services in local governments fall into three interconnected buckets, says Matthew Britt, general manager of smart cities at Honeywell. The buckets, he says, are urban mobility, sustainability and resilience, and public safety. “Urban mobility begins with road infrastructure and understanding how to move people around cities more effectively and sustainably. […]
  • Ahead of Surfside condo collapse anniversary, Florida's legislature approves inspection standards
    Nearly a year after one of the worst building tragedies in United States history, the partial collapse of Champlain Towers South in Surfside, Fla., the state’s legislature has passed a bill requiring stricter inspection standards. It’s expected to be signed into state law by Gov. Ronald DeSantis. The update significantly reduces the inspection timeline statewide for coastal […]

Leave a comment Cancel reply

-or-

Log in with your American City and County account

Alternatively, post a comment by completing the form below:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Content

  • 2021 Crown Communities Award winner: King County’s enterprise-wide COVID-19 response
  • 2021 Crown Communities Award winner: Benicia, Calif.'s 'forward-thinking' pandemic response
  • Joint $4M endeavor seeks to create racial equity in municipal bond market
  • 2021 Crown Communities Award winner: Phase 1 of Minot, N.D.’s Mouse River Enhanced Flood Protection Plan

White papers


Hand Hygiene: Compliance Matters

23rd May 2022

What it Takes to Build a Winning Esports Program

23rd May 2022

Sixth-Largest US School District Saves Over $500,000 by Utilizing a Cooperative

23rd May 2022
view all

Events


PODCAST


Young Leaders Episode 4 – Cyril Jefferson – City Councilman, High Point, North Carolina

13th October 2020

Young Leaders Episode 3 – Shannon Hardin – City Council President, Columbus, Ohio

27th July 2020

Young Leaders Episode 2 – Christian Williams – Development Services Planner, Goodyear, Ariz.

1st July 2020
view all

Twitter


AmerCityCounty

Remote alarm notifications add firewall as utilities face mounting threats of cyberattacks dlvr.it/SRB2fd

27th May 2022
AmerCityCounty

10 of America’s most idyllic lakeside communities dlvr.it/SR9yVd

27th May 2022
AmerCityCounty

Infrastructure improvements in cities often feature clean energy or connected technologies dlvr.it/SR6vm8

26th May 2022
AmerCityCounty

Ahead of Surfside condo collapse anniversary, Florida’s legislature approves statewide inspection standards dlvr.it/SR6qL7

26th May 2022
AmerCityCounty

American City & County survey highlights civic engagement priorities in public sector dlvr.it/SR3hMS

25th May 2022
AmerCityCounty

Changing recruitment practices can ease retention challenges dlvr.it/SQzzPt

24th May 2022
AmerCityCounty

EVs are coming in a big way – Will charging infrastructure be ready? dlvr.it/SQzfL1

24th May 2022
AmerCityCounty

Optimizing the 3 stages of RFP creation for faster results | June 16, 2022 at 2 PM ET dlvr.it/SQzV7d

24th May 2022

Newsletters

Sign up for American City & County’s newsletters to receive regular news and information updates about local governments.

Resale Insights Dashboard

The Resale Insights Dashboard provides model-level data for the entire used equipment market to help you save time and money.

Municipal Cost Index

Updated monthly since 1978, our exclusive Municipal Cost Index shows the effects of inflation on the cost of providing municipal services

Media Kit and Advertising

Want to reach our digital audience? Learn more here.

DISCOVER MORE FROM INFORMA TECH

  • IWCE’s Urgent Communications
  • IWCE Expo

WORKING WITH US

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

FOLLOW American City and County ON SOCIAL

  • Privacy
  • CCPA: “Do Not Sell My Data”
  • Cookies Policy
  • Terms
Copyright © 2022 Informa PLC. Informa PLC is registered in England and Wales with company number 8860726 whose registered and Head office is 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG.
This website uses cookies, including third party ones, to allow for analysis of how people use our website in order to improve your experience and our services. By continuing to use our website, you agree to the use of such cookies. Click here for more information on our Cookie Policy and Privacy Policy.
X