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“You’re an analog player in a digital world”—a great line from Ocean’s Thirteen. I wonder: Is your company’s website a static brochure in a dynamic Web 3.0 world? Is it time to take the plunge and update your virtual presence? And if so, with so many changes in technology, how do you embark on redesigning your website?
Today’s world of open source tools and available applications can sometimes make it difficult for a business owner to know the difference between simple and complicated. Information you hear about applications like WordPress, Drupal, Python, and Ruby on Rails can make it seem like building a dynamic website is easy. Now, add in the thousands of web developers out there that you need to choose from, and it may be hard to find someone who understands your needs.
But it is harder still to find the right developer if you don’t completely understand your needs, and how to express them. Before you sit down to write an RFP or interview a web design/development firm, there is a preparation process every business needs to go through.
STEP 1: DEFINE THE GOALS OF YOUR WEBSITE
The first step is to move away from the computer and outline your goals. This seems simple, but try to avoid tech speak and the comparison website conversation. Don’t talk about other websites that you want yours to look or function like. Look at the needs you have in every aspect of your business (sales, marketing, operations, etc.) and then determine the goals of your website based on that information.
Is it meant to generate new business? If so, how? Do you want your website to allow for greater customer communication? How? How about internal processes you want to streamline? Are there marketing initiatives that need to be integrated into the website? Do you have social campaign strategies planned? How does your website relate to these plans?
Be specific in your list, and think about growth ideas. For example, is your goal to eventually go green and create online forms to help cut down on paper? Today’s idea may be to have greater control over your content, and next year you may want to add a social application that allows visitors to show the world they are connected to your company. Or maybe building up content on your website will lead to a client-only area with training videos, tips, and advice.
You may never grow in these areas, but if you think about possible growth ideas now, you will ensure that your new website has a strong foundation. This list will help your developer understand your strategy and choose a foundation that is easier to scale, saving you money in development down the line.
STEP 2: BUILD YOUR MAP
The next step in any web project—large or small—is to explore the architecture of the website. After you submit your clearly defined needs, web development firms will create a layout of the website. This is done to help all parties visualize the project, and to clearly outline the sections and the purposes of these sections. I recommend you go through this process with the web development firms you are considering before hiring someone, because this process always opens a can of worms.
Even if you have to go through it a few times, it is worth the time investment. When you see things mapped out, you begin to get more ideas, which can often create additional costs. By doing this step in advance, you are preparing yourself and your team for the commitment you all are about to make. An added benefit of creating your map before hiring a developer is the opportunity to see how the firm thinks. A good web design/development team will often see things you do not and offer some recommendations on more concise ways to organize your website. This is a great way to evaluate the firms you interview.
STEP 3: WIREFRAMES
A wireframe is not the official design stage, but a sketch of how you see your information laid out on the computer screen. This step is not about defining the colors or fonts in the design, but it is the gateway to understanding how things function on your pages. This step can be done by putting shapes together in a PowerPoint document; you don’t need any special software.
The significance of drawing out the page is to start to visualize how things will function and discover items that you didn’t realize you needed, but that make the user experience easier. Again, you don’t have to be a techie; the goal here is to help you to understand navigation, content, and data flow.
When you draw out your page, you start to visualize things like where your product image, the product name, and the price will go, the number of thumbnails you want to show, the options you need customers to choose from before adding your product to their shopping cart, and the like. What this will do is tell your developer what data you need to collect from viewers, and what is important to you. Defining the functions you want your website to have will help the web firms create a more accurate bid.
STEP 4: FUNCTION
Your website’s function is one of the major components of your RFP, or explanation, to a web development firm. If you’re not clear about the basic functions you want to have, your estimate will likely vary tremendously from the final cost.

