Define Website Purpose and Goals
One of the first factors to consider about website cost is what you need the website to do. If you plan to list 1,000 products for sale on an e-commerce site and want customers to be able to buy directly from you, each of those products needs their own page. That’s 1,000 pages of design and copy. If you need 1,000 products, that’s going to be more than a smaller site. Both are very different price points from a website that’s a simple educational or informational site with very little interaction from your readers.
Design a website that fits your needs. The best home services website design, for example, must be able to share what your services are, provide testimonials and reviews, educate your readers, and then provide a way to book service. Look at the various components that make this up – landing pages, contact forms, and pages for each service. What types of pages does your website need to give your readers what they need and expect to find?
Once you determine the purpose of your website, you can then align your website design goals to match. Will your website be:
- Marketing for your business?
- An e-commerce place to buy products?
- Informational only?
- Lead generation only?
- A mix of goals?
With that in mind, create some basic core goals for your website. Do you want your website to help you with:
- Building your brand?
- Ranking in the search engines?
- Pull in leads?
- Increase website traffic?
- Improve conversion rate?
You don’t have to choose just one of these. A well-designed website will incorporate many of these factors within it. Still, you must determine what is most important to your website. This ultimately provides insight to the web design team about the types of templates and features your site needs to perform well. That, then, can help determine the cost of building a website with those features to accomplish the desired goals.