1. Your project image is black and white. Thus, the single most important image associated with your project page fails to benefit from the vibrancy that color can afford. Compare it to the image that you are using at the top of your Twitter page:
2. As I scroll down the page, your other choices of imagery to populate your project page with are either small in size, or they are fairly subdued, as far as imagery goes. All other things being equal, large images will provide more visual bang for the buck than smaller images, as far as the generation of visual impact is concerned.
3. The descriptive text beneath the two fellows who collectively form the Immortal Mics Team, Brandon and Ryan, is way too small. Who wants to strain their eyes, to read that?
4. Swap out Ryan's photo. He's not smiling. That is a missed opportunity for the generation of positive energy via visual means. A small thing, certainly, but small things have a way of adding up, and small visual elements collectively comprise the sum total of your project page's "visual score."
5. Now, make your videos awesome, too, is a nice little slogan - BUT.....None of those small images can be clicked to start a video, nor even a larger version of the images in question. Instead of telling us through that text quip, show us. Don't depend simply on the page visitor to imagine what their videos might look like. Create some, and have them handy, just a link click away. Or, do you want project page visitors to interact with your page? If they interact, then that means that they linger.
6. You have a huge mass of text at the end of your page, as I scroll down. That mass needs to be broken up, visually. That way, it becomes more tempting to read it. You live in the age of Twitter. How many will likely want to read the three hundred and sixty-seven words that collectively comprise that mass in its current incarnation? The natural inclination of page visitors is to scroll, and if they do so, their eye will lead them to resting points. That mass of text is a cliff for their eye to fall off of. Encourage the eye to pause and rest, by giving the eye something to land on.