
Preview image. Unlock full-res
Two-column section pairing a serif customer-stories prompt with a vertically divided grid of six well-known brand logos.
Summary
A clean two-column social-proof block: a serif "See who's hiring with Greenhouse" prompt and green pill button on the left, a thin vertical rule, and a tidy grid of six recognizable company logos on the right. The defining trait is its restraint, letting the logos alone carry credibility.
Visual description
On a white background the left half holds a two-line serif headline in near-black and, below a gap, a green filled pill button labeled "Read customer stories". A faint full-height vertical divider separates the two halves. The right half is a 2-by-3 grid of color brand logos (betterworks, coursera, Evernote, Policygenius, nerdwallet, SeatGeek), each in its own native color, evenly spaced with abundant whitespace. There is no card, border, or background tint around the marks.
Key takeaway
Splitting a logo wall away from a short, confident prompt with one button reads more editorial and less cluttered than a centered logo strip. The single thin vertical rule does all the structural work, so the logos float on open space.
Reuse notes
Reach for this when you have a handful of strong, recognizable customer logos and want quiet social proof rather than a quote block. Best with logos that survive in full color on white; weaker or visually noisy logos will need a greyscale treatment to stay calm. Pairs naturally with serif-led sections elsewhere on the page.





















