I agree about the wordpress sites. They can be very sharp looking if you know what to do and know how to customize it in a way that will give yo a professional look and feel.
You have to remember that most people wont have the time and or patience to learn how to install/customize/tweak a CMS site like wordpress/joomla/drupal (or the countless other platforms) in order to get it looking professional.
The conversation earlier in this thread was in regards to a uniform store (or one the of oldest or best uniform stores in his area, I believe) that wanted to have an online presence. In that case, a professional looking site that equals or trumps his competitor was a viable solution (and still is in my opinion).
For the mom and pop shop selling a few products or services or for something like a product review site, personal blogs, affiliate marketing sites where you pitch products of well known companies, information sites, these don’t have to look super professional.
And like its been mentioned over and over, SEO, content creation, marketing, list building, back links, etc… are completely separate animals that must be done (and for some, must constantly be done) if you want to increase your revenue and perhaps start living off your sites.
One click installs, upload templates, add plugins/components/and modules, put up some decent graphics and you should be good.
If you outsource, just keep in mind your total cost and budget. You’ll get what you pay for, in the end, and don’t pay until you’ve got your goods delivered. You can end up paying more than you thought or you can come in way under what you thought. It all depends on the scope of the project.
I usually build out most of my sites, customize them, seo them, etc… I just follow my system. But, I have also outsourced a lot of my projects too. Mostly because of time. I now have American writers that write 300-500 word SEO articles on topics that I choose, for $1-$3 per article. That was their price and I am happy to pay it. Saves me so much time. I have also paid up to $40 per article too. It all depends on your budget and what you want accomplished.
Set your goals. Not just your design goals, but what exactly you want to accomplish with your site(s). What type of site is it? Are you selling a product/service? Are you setting up information sites like- “How to live in Spain for under 1,000 ? a month.” “How to get in shape,” “why eat organic,” etc….
How much traffic you want/need, how much you want to make each month (short term sand long term goals), etc…
If you’re selling a product, are you up-selling them on other related products (you should be. look at godaddy, for example), do people click the “buy now” button then don’t buy? How’s your checkout process? What’s the percentage of people going to the checkout and not completing the transaction and why? These are things you should look at.
Are you analyzing your analytics? How do people find your site? Are they typing in keywords for products that you are not even selling? If so, you should start selling that product (find affiliate products that you can promote in addition to your own products, etc…).
Just some things to think about.
nizzo - 13 August 2010 10:12 PM
We concur, a very interesting thread.
After reading it through it has occurred that the hardest part of some of what has been talked about is to stay subjective.
When one has built, tweaked and updated a website for so long, it is virtually impossible to critique it yourself from the perspective of it’s visitors. It is, after all ‘your baby’, and when watching it grow up you cannot readily see it as others might.
With this in mind, does anybody know of any websites that one could submit ‘their baby’ to, in order to receive free analysis and contructive feedback of content/construction/aesthetics etc?
There are a lot of webmaster forums that you can post a link to your site looking for feedback. I saw your site and I personally think that you can almost get rid of everything under your top nav bar all the way down to where your modules are (personal shopper service/our products). That’s what you’re selling and it should be right there “above the fold” when the page loads. That image .gif banner on top and the color buttons on the side look very outdated. It might be the way you do the images with the square corners and curved edges in addition to the images and font you’re using.
Plus, you’re using many different types/colors of the same times roman font on the body, but your modules are using arial font.
Anyways, those are just my thoughts. You may want to Google webmaster forums or something and post your link for some feedback.