North East Connected

Signs Your Website Needs Upgrading

Your business website is the world’s window into your company – your services, your products, your values, and your missions statement. And sometimes, it is the only window, as over 80% of clients/customers make their decisions online. That’s why it is important to make sure the site is as close to perfect as possible – it is important to monitor the performance of your website and learn when it is a good idea to invest more in it. This could be through a redesign, adding extra content, tweaking the code, etc. there are a lot of paths to upgrade your website, and this article tells you how you should frame the problem and look at it through an investment and productivity lense so you can get the best bang for your buck.

Measure Your Website’s Performance

Without empirical and accurate data measuring your website on multiple fronts, you really can’t have an objective way of finding out when your website will need an update. You’ll likely rely on your intuitions, which is a horrible thing to rely on in the business world (well, at least, if your goal is to survive long term). That’s why if you don’t have access to this kind of data already, you should start collecting it right away:

Measure How Much You’ll Gain from Upgrading

Now that you’ve collected as much data as possible and tested your website through a few different tools, it is, now, the time to learn how much will each upgrade benefit you. Although your upgrade paths are virtually limitless, we are going through a few basic examples so you can learn about some of the most common problems and how to approach them.

Measure How Much the Upgrade will Cost You

Now that you’ve learned how much you can expect in extra revenues when you choose how to upgrade your website with specific goals in mind, it is time to learn how much it costs. This is also a very complex step that you need to take many variables into account before you have the final cost.

If you’re deciding to upgrade your website yourself, you won’t need to pay upfront costs, but this doesn’t mean that it is cheap. You have to calculate the opportunity cost of spending tens of hours writing code, testing, and bug-fixing and running the website. You also need to keep in mind that a lot of the tools used to test websites generally cost money, and if you want to see comprehensive reports on the weaknesses of your website, you need to pay for these tools.

If you’re hiring a team, it is much easier to get a concrete figure. For example, if you come up with a design and then decided to use a Sketch to HTML service to bring it to life and upgrade your homepage’s design, you’ll learn the cost after messaging the company in at most two days.

Now that you have the cost, and you have the potential benefits of an upgrade, the only thing left is to decide if the cost will outweigh the benefits or not. This approach ensures when you decide to upgrade your website and invest in it, you get your money’s worth and then some.

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