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Alex Winter

By Alex Winter

Apr 22, 2024

Topics:

Web Design Small Business Marketing Endless Customers Podcast
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Web Design  |   Small Business Marketing  |   Endless Customers Podcast

Do You Really Need a New Website in 2024? [Endless Customers Podcast S.1 Ep.25]

Alex Winter

By Alex Winter

Apr 22, 2024

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Mary

If there is one thing that business owners need to be thinking about when it comes to doing a new website, whatever you do, never ever work with an agency that tells you they can't build a website that you can update on your own. This is a colossal, major, crazy red flag that's designed to keep you from being independent. So what you have to do is make sure you find a guide who can help you stand on your own feet so you can actually own your website and its success.


Alex

Wow.


Alex

Great advice.


Alex

I can't wait to talk about it.


Alex

Welcome back to Endless Customers. My name's Alex Winter and today I'm joined by Mary Brown who's a lead web strategist here at IMPACT Mary.


Alex

What's up?


Mary

Hey Alex, glad to be here.


Alex

Glad to have you. We always love having you on the show. I can't wait to talk about website stuff today. We got a lot to talk about. We got a lot of ground to cover. The big question, let's start high level. The big question everyone has been asking me or what I've been hearing is,


Alex

do I really need a website in 2024? With AI and with social media, is a website really that important? We hear from business leaders all the time that they come to you about website struggles and website challenges, and whether they should or they shouldn't. What's your take on all this?


Alex

What do you think about all this?


Mary

So, spoiler, I'm gonna get to it, is that there are really two situations in which our team will say you absolutely need a website right now, and I'm gonna get to that, but first, I will tell you, I hear a variety of things from people a ton of different reasons why business leaders feel they need a new website And I'll give you some of those so we often hear our site feels really stale


Mary

We feel like we need a design update or we hear you know We just hired a new CMO and the new marketing leader comes in and they think hey, we need a new website We need a fresh start We hear things like oh, we just launched a new product line. So obviously, we need a new website to support that. And maybe most often, Alex, that we hear is our leads are down. So the lead pipeline shrinks, people freak out, they're very stressed, they think, okay, new website is going to help jumpstart that, right?


Mary

Another one we hear all the time is we're unable to update the site on our own. So if you do not have editing access to the site, you've got to use an agency or a freelancer to update the site. We hear that all the time. This one kills me. Every business should be able to update their website. We're going to talk about that more too, but you must have to have to be able to do that. And finally, another significant challenge, but one that we probably hear the least, is that our website doesn't meet tech standards right now. We need to update it to meet those tech standards.


Mary

So I'm talking about site speed, responsiveness, page scripts, things like that. People don't always know the details of why, but they do think, okay, our site's painfully slow, and it's a tech problem, so that's why they come to us. But it really runs the gamut. There are all kinds of different reasons.


Alex

Yeah, those are some really good reasons, and I've heard a lot of those before, especially the new agency coming in, or a new CMO coming into the mix and going like, ìWeíre going to redesign everything. Weíre going to redo everything.î And sometimes that is whatís needed, but a lot of times thatís not usually the case and it ends up causing a lot more time and money being spent for really no actual gains when it comes to like your bottom line.


Alex

So with that, for CEOs, for business leaders that maybe are in this sort of sticky situation or having some of these problems, what advice do you give them? Or what's usually the first entry point of conversation as you start to talk with them about these issues?


Mary

So really it's trying to understand whether they actually have really impressing reasons why they need a new website, or if these are just symptoms. So oftentimes we do find that people are feeling those pains and they're just symptoms rather than the actual root cause of what the issue is. So when we have these conversations, it's trying to get to that root cause and understand how bad that root cause really is and if it needs a new website. Because a lot of times they don't, Alex.


Mary

A lot of the things that I mentioned before, they don't need a new website. And there are things that you can do. There's conversion rate optimization. Trying to improve the existing website can really go a long way. You know, a lot of CEOs aren't opening up PageSpeed Insights and reviewing their site scores to see if core web vitals are an issue, and they shouldn't be. They're running a business, so that's not their expertise.


Mary

They won't know the depth of that problem. And with leads, too. Leads are often just a symptom, and can a website help solve for that? Yeah, but it's just one piece of that. So unless they're addressing the underlying marketing strategy, a new website is unlikely to solve the whole problem in and of itself.


Alex

No, that makes sense.


Mary

Yeah, and we can build a new site that will convert better, but if people aren't writing the content that's gonna bring the right traffic, they won't have anyone to convert. Or if they do get traffic, and we do get conversions, but the sales team isn't on top of their game, you're still not going to get that revenue. So that's why the website is just one piece of that whole engine, right?


Mary

So we really need to understand what the root problems are so we can determine if the new website's going to be the thing that they need.


Alex

I love what you're saying. Yeah, and I think for business leaders out there, the differentiator is like thinking about it as the symptoms versus the causes, right? It's like you really need to identify these symptoms. And business leaders aren't web designers. They're not developers. They're not web experts. So it's not their specialty, but they still need


Alex

to understand some of these symptoms that are happening. So can we talk a little bit about some of the, you mentioned a few, but some of these common symptoms that you see on a regular basis and that you and your team are fixing on a daily basis.


Mary

Yeah, so definitely slow, slow websites. We've had people come to us where, you know, it takes seconds and seconds and seconds to load. And I know that that might not feel like a really big deal. But we know that, you know, if it takes longer than three seconds for a site to load on mobile, they might lose 53% of their visitors. That's huge. That's really huge. That's a symptom of a major problem, right? Or the not being able to edit the site is that is a symptom of also just a major problem. Like they're feeling the pain of that and that is a real problem that they have. So those along with ones that I already mentioned are probably the core ones that we see and hear most often and the pain we hear most often about,


Mary

that then we can dig deeper into and learn how to fix what they need.


Alex

Yeah, yeah, those are really great points. And it sounds to me, too, like the decision becomes difficult for business leaders to go, do I need a new website right now? Or are there some of these symptoms that we can fix and worry about a redesign later? Or maybe it's not really a redesign


Alex

and we just need to focus on these symptoms. Is that right that I say it that way?


Mary

Yeah, so you said it well, and really, I mentioned this before, there are really two situations in which we would say you absolutely need to update your site right now. So one is not being able to update it on your own, and I'm gonna keep saying this because of how important that is. So an outdated website is a liability


Mary

that can make you look bad, right? That's just very basic. But if you are being held hostage by your site and you can't update coffee, you can't create landing pages, you can't change CTAs, you need a new website ASAP. That would be one of those times that I would say right now you need a new website. You should never be beholden to someone else to be able to make these changes. And then the other reason that we would say you need a new website now would be if you're not meeting current tech standards.


Mary

So if you are not meeting the standards that are established by search engines, then you can't rank well. And then you definitely need a new website. So if you can't deliver on those, in either of those two ways, then just making updates or making optimizations isn't gonna help you save it. Like your index pages can just keep slipping in rankings, your traffic can go down, so these are major problems where we would say right now, you need a new site.


Alex

Yeah, yeah, no, it makes sense, and when we think about They Ask, You Answer, and what Marcus teaches all the time, control is important on your website because it's a living, breathing thing. It's not a set it and forget it. And I think a lot of business people tend to do that. They build the website, it's done, they pop champagne,


Alex

they're all excited, and then they don't touch it. And that is just almost like a portfolio page instead of a living, breathing thing that you can update and that you can change and that you should be shifting to meet your potential customers where they are. So for the control piece, how do you give that power back? Or what should business owners be thinking about in order to have that control


Alex

as they start their website journey in 2024?


Mary

Yeah, so you need to have something that a person on the marketing team can work with. You need to be on a platform that someone, a marketer, can work with. You do not need to have a developer on staff. I'm saying this in gigantic, capital, bolded, red letters. You don't need a developer. You shouldn't need a developer,


Mary

your content manager should be able to update your website. That's really cool.


Alex

No, I wasn't expecting you to say that. So you don't necessarily need to have a developer on staff, is what you're saying, in that if it's built correctly, you should have the control.


Mary

Yeah, exactly. And that's not a hard thing to find or do, Alex. It's about having, if you're working with a company to build a new site It's about finding one who would rather empower you in your team to truly own it or finding one that would rather Handcuff you to them so that they just have recurring revenue for the next 10 years Which is what a lot of agencies do and I hate to say that But it does happen So finding one that wants to coach and train and teach


Mary

You had a really own things and finding one that can build on a platform where you can own it so you can learn things like how to optimize it on your own and really understand the performance of it is crucial for having that control.


Alex

Yeah, that's huge. I never really heard it put that way but I love what you're saying because I figured you'd at least need to have like a web specialist or somebody on your team but it sounds like if it's built correctly and you worked with the right team, they can put the control back in your hands


Alex

and you can really update your site when you need to, change things when you need to, and you don't need to call your agency or send an email and submit a ticket and wait a week and see what happens and go through the stereotypical agency route.


Alex

Yeah, and I will say,


Mary

so you mentioned a web specialist on staff. I will say that while you don't need to hire someone whose resume says, you know, web strategist because I work with a lot of content managers who I then train to learn how to use tools like Lucky Orange and they learn how to review data and perform experience that does take some education, right? So there's there is a difference between owning the ability to optimize your site and learning how to do it. So there are two things that go hand in hand there.


Mary

There are a ton of ways that companies can learn how to really optimize and learn about conversion rate optimization, which is great. You don't have to have, you don't have to come in with that background. It can be taught and learned. So that's an important piece of the journey as well.


Alex

Yeah, it definitely is. And it's one of those things too that even as a business leader or as a CEO, you do want to learn these things. And it may seem like you don't need to, but it directly affects sales. It directly affects the traffic and leads that are coming into your business. So as an owner, that's something that I hope you're


Alex

concerned about and that you're focused on. So this is just another part of that piece, right? It's just another part of finding those traffic leads and sales and finding more of your best customers.


Mary

Yeah, and it's crazy, Alex, because some people will say, you know, we just spent a ton of money building a new website, and then they don't want to find out if it's working for them or not, right? It's part of that set it and forget it thing that we were talking about before, but if you just spend, say somebody spends $40,000 on a new website, but they don't know how to look at data,


Mary

they don't know how to see if the site is working for them and if it's not working or if they even have a feeling it's not working, they don't know how to figure out how to make it work. You just wasted $40,000. Right? That's, it's mind boggling to me. And that is what CEOs should be caring about, right?


Mary

Is all of this money I invested, am I getting a return on that or not?


Alex

ROI is huge. And I've heard all too often, and we've talked about this offline too, where somebody will spend $40,000, $50,000 on a new website redesign, they launch it, and they're not getting the traffic leads and sales, and then they talk to another agency, and then the next agency is like,


Alex

oh, you need to redesign your whole website again and spend another $40,000, $50,000. So that happens a lot, and that's a recurring thing where it puts a bad taste in people's mouths. And I don't blame CEOs and other people for being like, this sucks, I hate dealing with this, I just want it to work. So for people that are struggling like that,


Alex

what resources do they have? How can they start to educate? How can you point them in a good direction where they can start to learn a little bit more and get themselves set up for success?


Mary

Yeah, so one of those things that you need to understand, and I've been saying is, what metrics should I be looking at to understand whether a website is performing well or not, right? Because it's not just about number of leads. There are so many other things that you have to look at on a website. You have to know if people are engaging with your content.


Mary

You have to know if you're getting the right traffic to your website. Just because you're getting traffic doesn't mean there are people who will ever convert for you. So you have to know what kind of traffic. And you have to understand what good conversion rates look like and all of those things. So getting better educated about that is critical


Mary

so that you know those things. I always send people first to IMPACT+. You know, we've got a good resource on that. You can learn about the tools that you should be using for that type of thing. We have courses about how to use things like Looking Orange. So that's a good place to start, just to understand what the heck


Mary

should I even be looking at? On my website, we talk about those different metrics to be looking at. So just, if you're trying to wrap your head around that from a start, it's definitely a good place to be looking.


Alex

Yeah, that's a great recommendation. I also have a question, too, around the longevity of a site. Because we were just talking about how, oh, you just redesigned your site, but it's wrong, so redesign it again and redesign it again. And is there a redesign every couple years? Is that standard?


Alex

Or what do you recommend for, I guess, long-term success with your website? So you're making a big investment, you talked about ROI, how do you get that ROI, and how do you keep your site operating optimally for the long-term?


Mary

Yeah, so I wouldn't put a certain number of years on it. I know people would probably like to say, oh, every three years, every five years, whatever. I wouldn't do that at all. If you can edit your site, you are winning because UX and best practices can change and evolve. So being able to change things and evolve with it is crucial. And also your business can change. So maybe you develop new products or services and you need to keep your messaging up to date. So being able to change that messaging, have your messaging evolve


Mary

as you go along will be huge. Because that is the backbone of your website is the content of it. So I know some people get bored with design sometimes and they get it, but that's not the thing that's going to make people convert. It's your messaging, it's your copy, right? And the story you're telling. So if you can edit and change that story and keep it compelling for people, that's really huge. If you stay on top of Core Vitals and keep your site's performance as high as possible, that is going to serve you well.


Mary

So if people bounce from your site because it's too slow, it doesn't even matter what kind of copy you have. They're never gonna see it. So that's another huge piece of this. But a thing that is never going to change, that never changes over time, is making sure that your website builds trust. So if you have a learning center,


Mary

if you include pricing information on your site, if you have testimonials, and if you are answering your buyers most pressing questions throughout their journey, then you're going to be in really good shape over years because those are the things that build trust. That's the currency of business. That's what makes people buy.


Mary

So as long as you're doing all of those things, then your site will have the kind of longevity you're looking for where you're not needing to spend, again, tens of thousands of dollars every three years.


Alex

Yeah, no, that's really great advice. And the design piece, it is important, but design is subjective. And the flashy stuff, as cool as it is, and it plays into the overall perception, content is king. And I think what you said is so valid that the content really needs to be up front and how you build trust and how you stay open and honest and how you give people these resources


Alex

so that they can make an informed buying decision. That's really what it's all about. And we're seeing that shift too. Austin and I were talking about this earlier in studio that it's happening across the board. It's not just websites. Even with video, people are caring less and less about these flashy, high-quality videos and they care more about what people are saying and the quality of the content and if it's meaningful or not. The other stuff is secondary, it really is. So I think that's a


Alex

huge point for people and listeners out there to take into account as they go on their website design journey. So one more question for you. When we're talking about the flashy piece versus the content piece, do you have like, I know you work with a lot of clients and you work with a lot of industries and companies. Do you have an example of maybe somebody that was very focused on the flashy design side of things and then you kind of brought them into the like,


Alex

hey, let's focus more on building trust and the content and giving the control back to you and to your team. Can you maybe share a story with us like that?


Mary

Yes, it does happen.


Alex

Is this like every engagement that you have basically?


Mary

No, no, no, it's not all of them, but we call it shiny object syndrome, where people will see shiny and they'll say, oh, I want that. Oh, I need that. Oh, I want that. Totally. And often what happens with websites when it comes to shinies and it comes with flashy stuff is it can be really bad for your website performance. Really, really bad. Because that's the kind of stuff that can slow your site down. And as I mentioned, over three seconds on mobile, 53% of your traffic. Not worth it.


3

That's huge.


Alex

Literally half your traffic is gone because you wanna have some cool flashy animation.


Mary

Yeah, not worth it, never worth it. So I'm a geek, you know this, I'm a geek. So for me it always comes back to those type of numbers and it comes back to making sure that people have their actual needs clearly defined. What is the goal that we're talking about? So I always try to bring people back, center them back to the goals.


Mary

What are we trying to do? Try to make as many data-driven decisions as possible. Is this going to help us convert people or not? Or is it just going to entertain you because it's your website and you want to have fun with it? Making sure we're tracking these type of measurable things. So, you know, we will tell someone, here's how your site is performing now, right?


Mary

Not doing it, not doing what you need it to do, not being your best salesperson, which is what your website should always be. If it's not speaking to that goal in some way, then we're not doing it. It's not worth, honestly, you know what a lot of that flash also does? It adds budget.


Mary

It adds budget because it costs more development and development can be expensive. So it's not worth the extra money either if it's not going to directly impact conversion from a data perspective.


Alex

Yeah, no, that makes a lot of sense. You're right, development time is money. So if it takes more time to create these shiny object things, it's gonna ultimately cost you more money to develop these things. And really, it's not gonna affect your bottom line. It sounds like it's gonna hurt your bottom line. So you're spending money up front


Alex

and you're losing money on the tail end because people aren't engaging correctly with your site. And you said something that really stuck out to me. We talk about this a lot here at IMPACT, making data-driven decisions. Can you talk a little bit more about what that actually means, and especially when we're talking about having control


Alex

and being able to update your site like we were talking about earlier, how that plays into that.


Mary

Yeah, so every website should start with strategy. It has to start with strategy, and it has to be based in those types of decisions of let's look at the current data of how people are using the site, let's look at the behavior we want to drive, let's look at the buyer's journey that we need to be sending people on,


Mary

and let's make sure that our website is rooted in that strategy so that that buyer's journey, the ideal journey comes to fruition. And we're doing everything we can to support that journey. And then reviewing that data of whether it's working or not and making any optimizations to help move people in the direction we need them to. So that's the nice thing about websites


Mary

is that you don't have to just cross your fingers and hope and say, gee, I really hope this goes well. You can actually look at numbers. As long as you are educated about what numbers you need to be looking at and how to manipulate them. But you can make really educated decisions based on actual user behavior. So if you're not doing that,


Mary

then you're not doing it the right way. So that's why I always advise starting with that strategy, sticking with that strategy, and then always bringing data into it to support everything we're trying to do.


Alex

Totally, I couldn't agree more. Do you have use cases or stories you could share where a business owner or a company really was so focused on the vanity metrics of things and the design where they were just like, yeah, this is exactly what we wanted and we think it's working, we're making these assumptions that it seems to be okay.


Alex

And in reality, they're missing so much opportunity that could have been shifted if they were focusing on the data and they were focusing on exactly what you're talking about.


Mary

Yeah, and you know what's funny? It's not even just they're not focused on the data. It can be that they're not focused on the right data. Oh, okay. So I can't tell you how many people that we have who just look at traffic and they just say, we just wanna increase traffic. So they write a ton of content that is not focused


Mary

on answering their actual buyers questions. And so they think, hey, we just got a bunch of traffic, but it might be related to something in pop culture that's very interesting to people at the moment. And they barely tie it to their actual business. So they get a ton of traffic because that's what people are interested in at the moment, but it has nothing to do with the actual buyer's journey. It has nothing to do with building trust with their customers. And then when they're not converting


Mary

and they're not getting the leads and they're saying, but we have so much traffic, it's because you have the wrong traffic. That happens all the time that people have the wrong traffic, traffic that will never actually convert for them because they're writing the wrong type of thing. And that's one of those times when they might come to us and say, like, gosh, what's wrong? We have no idea what's wrong. And then once you dig in and you see what you're getting for it, that's when you learn.


Alex

Yeah, no, that's a huge point. And I think everyone looks at traffic. It doesn't matter if it's website, if it's social media, everyone's looking at those numbers and how many views it gets and if it goes viral, right? But that's actually not the best way to think about it because ultimately you're looking for conversions. So if you get a million views on something or a million hits on a page on your site and you only get one conversion, that's not really, it's not really working so well. Whereas like if you only get 500 people that view it but maybe a hundred of those 500 convert, that's

Alex

amazing because those conversions leads to sales and that's like really the focus here is shifting the mentality and I think a lot of people get that wrong and honestly that's something that I used to think about incorrectly too. I was always looking at the vanity metrics versus the real data that drives. Listening, this is Endless Customers. I'm Alex Winter. I'm Alex Winter. We'll see you on the next episode.


 

About this Episode

There are plenty of reasons businesses buy new websites. Maybe it’s part of a rebranding effort — or because the new CMO claims it’s a necessity. Sometimes they buy a new site just because the old site feels stale. 

If you’re in one of these boats and are about to call up an agency and write a big check, slow down. According to Mary Brown, lead website strategist here at IMPACT, many businesses invest in a full website redesign when they really don’t need to

Mary says that conversion rate optimization and strategic improvements often yield better results than complete overhauls.

And a simple refresh of imagery, fonts, and design elements can go a long way to making your old site feel new. 

"There are really two situations in which our team will say, you absolutely need a website right now,” she says. 

  • You can’t update your site: If a company cannot update its website on its own — meaning it must rely on an agency or freelancers to make changes — it’s time for a new site. An outdated website is a liability, and working with outsiders is expensive and inefficient. 
  • Your site doesn’t meet technical standards:  If a website does not meet current technological standards set by search engines, it won't perform well in search rankings. This includes things like site speed and mobile responsiveness. If your current site can’t meet these thresholds, a refresh will not solve the problem. 

The most important thing, says Mary, is to not rush into a website redesign. Agencies will line up around the block to sell you a site you don’t need, and it’s easy to end up with the exact same marketing problems after you drop $75K on a shiny new site.

Instead, think carefully about what challenges you’re trying to solve. Business leaders should “try to understand whether they have real pressing reasons why they need a new website,” says Mary,” or whether they’re just seeing symptoms of a different problem.”

Although the promise of a new website is exciting, the last thing you want is to make a hasty decision you regret six months later. 

Connect with Mary

Mary Brown is the lead website strategist at IMPACT, and she has lent her expertise to website projects in dozens of industries. 

Get to know Mary

Connect with Mary on LinkedIn

Learn more about how IMPACT’s team delivers the website your customers want

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Endless Customers is a podcast produced and distributed by IMPACT, a sales and marketing training organization.

We coach businesses to implement our They Ask, You Answer framework to build trust and fill their pipeline. 

For inquiries about sponsorship opportunities or to be considered as a guest, email awinter@impactplus.com.

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