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Creating a website

A website can be an effective marketing and promotion tool that requires little maintenance, functions 24/7 and reaches out to people all over the world. It can help you win and retain customers, perhaps generating much-needed additional revenue. And because of lower costs, margins on online sales can be significantly higher.

Even if the nature of your business means you can’t sell online, a good website can provide added credibility – not having one might even create a bad impression.

In recent years, the internet has become a major influence on people’s buying decisions and habits. The good news is, getting a high-quality website up and running need not be expensive or difficult.

Should you create your own website?

Building your own website can save a lot of money, but the results might look like a ‘dog’s dinner’ and having a terrible website is worse than having none at all.

If you choose the ‘DIY option’, have a good look around at other people’s websites to see what works. As a general rule, simple is best.

There are many DIY online website-creation sites that enable people with limited experience to put together their own website, register a domain name, get email addresses, even set up online shopping and payment facilities. But beware – you could still end up with something that looks terrible.

Paying a professional web designer to build you a basic website should give far superior results for as little as £300-£400. This usually includes design, domain name registration and arranging hosting of your site by an internet service provider.

Seek recommendations, look at their previous work and ask for a full breakdown of costs. Crucially, once the site is live, to avoid any further costs, you need to be able to update it from your own computer.

Writing good website content

Look, feel and function are critical, but your website must communicate your key messages effectively. A visitor must quickly be able to understand why they should buy from you. Don’t allow form to triumph over content – your website needs to sell your business and its wares.

Search engine optimisation (SEO) is crucial if you will rely on customers finding your website via search engines such as Google. You could also use paid-for advertising services such as Google Adwords, for which you are charged on a pay-per-click basis.

If you plan to trade online, your website must include your address and contact details, privacy policy, terms and conditions, exchange and refund policy, information about delivery and making payments. Stock availability and pricing should be kept up to date and you must explain how much VAT and post and packaging is payable per item.

Taking online payments 

To collect online payments you need to include a shopping cart function on your website, as well as a secure means by which customers can enter their details. Many web designers provide a shopping cart function and payment facility as part of their packages.

You also need a merchant account. Providers such as PayPal are popular, but also ask at your bank to see if it can help. Normally, you pay a set-up charge, monthly service fee and service charge for each transaction.

Test your website thoroughly before launch – that includes acting on feedback from potential customers. Post-launch, monitor usage and keep content fresh and current if you want people to keep coming back.

More on this topic on our IT Donut: http://www.itdonut.co.uk/blog/2011/07/five-myths-managing-business-website

  Also see the following:-

Find more articles, videos and tools in the Resources box on the right.

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If the price is meant to include the branding, site design, site build into XHTML, uploading, chatting with the client, Google analytics, then I'd question what you'd really get and when.

However, kudos if there's a company who can charge that little and properly sort you out. Then great!!!

 

 

Thank you for this site, it is very helpful.

 

Creating your own website is actually very easy nowdays - making it look professional is also not as hard either - if you use wordpress as a content management system (rather than a blog) you can get a website setup in minutes - of course, the content takes time to add, but the theme of the site can be changed in a second.

The reason i love using wordpress for creating a website is first, anyone can do it - second, if you hire a designer to make a custom design for a wordpress theme, its a lot cheaper than a web designer to create a website, than a wordpress theme.

Web hosting (http://iClickster.com) is also important - wordpress runs smoothly because its a very light script compared to most others and is currently used by most web entrepreneurs online.

I would have to seriously question your assumption that you will get a professional website for as little as £300-400. Yes you might get a lashed together wordpress or joomla template with minimal customisation for that price.

If you're serious about your web presence a site like this should be avoided. If you want something that is going to stand out from the rest and give your business some sort of return, it's worth investing in a proper website with a proper design agency.

Can you recommend any programmers?

I did my own website and then went and got professionals to do it properly. If you spend all day doing something you get good at it- i should spend all day being a good photographer not a bad website designer. Grant

"...monitor usage and keep content fresh and current if you want people to keep coming back." Agree. I am a rookie but happy with my global customers' support and comments - accepted me, you, we, our...:)) I believe it is good to follow the basic concepts of website designing initially, but more importantly develop flexibly to fit into the culture to create an influence of the targeted readers in a specific area, region or country. I understand that the taste for different designs, themes, settings and colours are most important. Every new webpage seems different when working with different people across the world. This is interesting while I keep on learning through research of web users, web readers and web 'chasers'!

Well £300 - £400 is roughly what i charge for web design... There isn't really a need to charge a lot, not for a regular website any way.

I've been running Code Required for almost 3 years now and we've been helping businesses large and small (from large corporate brand names to small, local businesses) and I still think it's possible to get "a presence" online for the figures quoted in the article but as a startup business it's important to understand you get what you pay for - as per the comment from clear-thought.

Really standing out from the crowd means you should go with a "proper" agency as opposed to your 17yr old nephew/son/niece (delete as appropriate) who will build the site as part of his A-level course work - after all this is likely to be the main piece of marketing that your customers will see as opposed to more traditional means of marketing... It will probably be the most cost effective too - especially if you are selling tangible goods online for example.

If you would like some more advice feel free to email me at: jon@coderequired.com.

It does sound like an understatement for the cost and for that price you definitely do risk getting a rather slap job....

If the price is meant to include, the branding, site design, site build into XHTML, uploading, chatting with the client, Google analytics, then I'd question what you'd really get and when.

However, kudos if there's a company who can charge that little and properly sort you out. Then great!

Otherwise, check out some of the startup business work we've done with Baobab Gardens (http://www.baobabgardendesign.com/) and MindTurn (http://www.mindturn.com/). They've both had design, branding, CMS, hosting and some friendly strategy chat for their digital future.

Without sounding completely like a sales pitch, mail us (http://www.thoughtden.co.uk/contact/) and ask about our new business packages.

Thought Dan
http://www.thoughtden.co.uk/

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