How Often Should You Update or Rebuild Your Website?
When it comes to updating your business website in a timely manner,
the one rule is this: There are no rules. That’s according to Christian
Riggs, president of Riggs Creative Group, a user-experience design and
website development firm in San Diego. Riggs says that deciding whether
to update, redesign or reengineer your site should depend entirely on
your business goals, objectives and economic considerations, rather than
on some superficial time frame pulled out of thin air. We asked him to
explain.
Q: Why would I redesign the look and feel of my website but not rebuild it?
A: A
variety of factors can make a redesign worth considering, but here are
several that almost always require an update. You’ve got new branding
and color standards, and you need to make sure your new look extends to
your website. Your bounce rates are extremely high, meaning people visit
but few convert; a well-thought-out redesign can turn this around. Or
your business has grown, and plans call for new products and services;
your site’s design may need to reflect that change. Last, your customers
complain about your site, claiming that it looks outdated or doesn’t
work well.
Q: What developments might require me to reengineer my website from scratch?
A: The
most important one is if your current site doesn’t adapt to mobile
device screens. Fixing this is an absolute must in today’s mobile-driven
world. Another would be if your site was originally built using Flash:
Apple’s iPads and iPhones don’t support Flash. That’s reason enough to
rebuild, but there’s another reason: Flash can slow your site down.
Anyone
in your company should be able to learn and use your content management
system (CMS) to update your site. You shouldn’t have to hire a
programmer to make simple changes and fixes. Along those same lines of
keeping things simple: If your site takes forever to load, you need to
reengineer the backend. Nobody puts up with long waits anymore.
Q: Should I invite my customers to be part of the redesign process?
A: Yes!
Customer opinion and feedback give you the kind of insights that
convert visitors into customers. Start by asking what they think of your
proposed design and if it appeals to them. Then ask about the problem
they’re looking to solve and if the information they need access to is
easy to find in the new design. After you relaunch the site, ask them
again if they like it. If they say no, address their concerns through
incremental design enhancements, which your new site should allow you to
do without starting over.
In short, you want to follow the lead
of sites like Apple.com and Amazon.com, which rarely undergo complete
facelifts. Instead, their sites evolve over time using an iterative
process that results in near invisible refinements that have the bonus
of maintaining the user experience that customers know and like.
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