Greetings ThemeCo,

Under the headline in our About Us section, the "click here for less" button triggers a JS event that closes the first accordion item. The second accordion item is open by default, so the net effect after clicking the button is a shorter "About" blurb. Note, I've hidden both accordion item headers with CSS.

However, I would like for the button's text to change when toggled, i.e.  from "less" to "more." It doesn't matter how it's accomplished, i.e. whether the text in that specific button element changes, or if the element is hidden and another toggle element revealed). It also doesn't matter to me if the element is a button or just paragraph text, as I'll probably remove the border and box shadow.

I found some JS that will change a button's text when clicked, but it doesn't trigger the accordion item. I've put that example in the second section below.

Thanks for taking the time to look at this! I'm looking forward to seeing what you suggest.

David

We revisit this writeup from time to time, polishing it up and making sure to mention our newest capabilities, clients, awards… but we feel like we’ve never nailed it. Hoping to be inspired this time around, we went to the Wayback Machine and looked through thirteen years of attempts.

We've said some pretty fancy stuff over the years. In 2011, we claimed we were the premiere creator of branded documentary content. We’d later note that we create 'films that forge the emotional connection.' Soon we started humble-bragging about our Sabre, Halo, and Clio awards. By 2016 we had adopted a more philosophical tone, proposing that 'people are inherently good,' and proclaiming our mission to be 'telling stories to prove it.' We even suggested that these stories, 'expertly crafted and told with passion, can inspire all of us to be better, more empathetic people' (that's some pretty heavy talk). Finally, after a decade calling ourself Flow Nonfiction, we decided even our name itself deserved a promotion.

After two years of Covid, it feels like we’re all redefining ourselves in one way or another. This time around, we’re going to skip the buzzwords and cut to the chase. We love to make things. We love the rush of story discovery, the discipline of development, and the thrill of creation. We are artists who approach every job with the same enthusiasm and passion we bring to our personal work. And, just so you know,  people who hire us usually wind up looking pretty smart for that decision. So have a look around at some things we’ve made, problems we’ve solved, and companies we’ve worked with - and drop us a line you’re ready to take the first step.

About Us

We revisit this writeup from time to time, polishing it up and making sure to mention our newest capabilities, clients, awards… but we feel like we’ve never nailed it. Hoping to be inspired this time around, we went to the Wayback Machine and looked through thirteen years of attempts.

We've said some pretty fancy stuff over the years. In 2011, we claimed we were the premiere creator of branded documentary content. We’d later note that we create 'films that forge the emotional connection.' Soon we started humble-bragging about our Sabre, Halo, and Clio awards. By 2016 we had adopted a more philosophical tone, proposing that 'people are inherently good,' and proclaiming our mission to be 'telling stories to prove it.' We even suggested that these stories, 'expertly crafted and told with passion, can inspire all of us to be better, more empathetic people' (that's some pretty heavy talk). Finally, after a decade calling ourself Flow Nonfiction, we decided even our name itself deserved a promotion.

After two years of Covid, it feels like we’re all redefining ourselves in one way or another. This time around, we’re going to skip the buzzwords and cut to the chase. We love to make things. We love the rush of story discovery, the discipline of development, and the thrill of creation. We are artists who approach every job with the same enthusiasm and passion we bring to our personal work. And, just so you know,  people who hire us usually wind up looking pretty smart for that decision. So have a look around at some things we’ve made, problems we’ve solved, and companies we’ve worked with - and drop us a line you’re ready to take the first step.

About Us

We revisit this writeup from time to time, polishing it up and making sure to mention our newest capabilities, clients, awards… but we feel like we’ve never nailed it. Hoping to be inspired this time around, we went to the Wayback Machine and looked through thirteen years of attempts.

We've said some pretty fancy stuff over the years. In 2011, we claimed we were the premiere creator of branded documentary content. We’d later note that we create 'films that forge the emotional connection.' Soon we started humble-bragging about our Sabre, Halo, and Clio awards. By 2016 we had adopted a more philosophical tone, proposing that 'people are inherently good,' and proclaiming our mission to be 'telling stories to prove it.' We even suggested that these stories, 'expertly crafted and told with passion, can inspire all of us to be better, more empathetic people' (that's some pretty heavy talk). Finally, after a decade calling ourself Flow Nonfiction, we decided even our name itself deserved a promotion.

After two years of Covid, it feels like we’re all redefining ourselves in one way or another. This time around, we’re going to skip the buzzwords and cut to the chase. We love to make things. We love the rush of story discovery, the discipline of development, and the thrill of creation. We are artists who approach every job with the same enthusiasm and passion we bring to our personal work. And, just so you know,  people who hire us usually wind up looking pretty smart for that decision. So have a look around at some things we’ve made, problems we’ve solved, and companies we’ve worked with - and drop us a line you’re ready to take the first step.