website-mistakes

The great website debate

We\’ve been doing a ton of websites lately and talking to even more people about the types of websites they need, how to access the back end of them, and basically the process of building a website. I’ve seen so many companies bamboozled by people who take advantage of the unknowing and the website naïve. It pisses me off and makes me sad.  So I’m going to offer a Website Nightmare  – Please don’t do this EVER checklist.

Here goes:

  1. Be very, very, very leery of someone who says you need a custom built CMS site – you don’t. What will happen is that person who designed the site will eventually disappear and you will be left with something that can’t be updated, fixed, and it’s just God AWFUL to maintain. There is NO need with all the WordPress prebuilt CMS templates out there.  No need. Don’t do it unless you are a HUGE corporation with in-house coders that can collaborate and work with the developer. Small businesses – use WordPress.
  2. Don’t get sucked into industry driven “templated” sites – that are often prefab CMS systems. You pay a monthly fee – but they own everything. Stop paying them and you have no site. Try to move it to another vendor – you can’t.  Once again you are at their mercy.
  3. Don’t use CANNED content – typically from industry driven companies who promise the Best Sites for REALTORS, Insurance, Financial Advisors, Manufacturers – the list goes on.  Canned content is useless – don’t do it.  You need to tell YOUR story, not someone elses.
  4. You should ALWAYS OWN your site – always.  Once the designer is done doing their magic – you have all the logins, passwords et al. The intellectual property is YOURS not theirs. From photos to copy to design. ALWAYS.
  5. If it sounds too good to be true – it probably is.  There are many overseas designers who do an amazing job and they will be far more cost effective than using a local person – the problem is they usually come in “pools” – and if you have a problem – good luck getting someone on the phone.  Who you worked with today will be different than who you work with tomorrow.  Now if your site is for a one day event – go for inexpensive. If it’s for your company – go local.
  6. Cost – it varies depending on what you need.  Some websites DO cost $20K, some should only cost $3K, some will cost $100K. Do your homework.  If someone is half the price of everyone else – RED FLAG. Danger Will Robinson – you probably aren’t comparing apples to apples.

Don’t get bamboozled. We’ve seen too many people stuck with something they can’t update, can’t move, can’t…well just can’t do anything with and they end up spending money completely redoing it.

Questions – call us. No BS from Jenn and I – we’ll be up front and honest with what you need versus what you have (or what you’ve been offered!)

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