- Initial Research: Planning
It should go without saying that you don't just tear down your walls without a plan. The amount of time you spend preparing and being strategic reflects how much you care about the outcome.
Our method begins with a meeting with many of our strategists to review goals and ask existential questions such as why your company exists, what services you provide, and who your website is for. There is a significant difference between a bachelor suite and a home for a developing family with many interests.
- MOAR Planning for Information Architecture
We're a strategic firm, therefore you can expect that every stage of a website overhaul is planned.
At this point, we know who you are, who is coming over, and what you expect to happen when they arrive. It's time to plan how to get them to do the right thing in your home - convert.
- UX Design: Conceptualization
We now have a solid understanding of your material and will start serious about mapping it to the new place.
The architect has arrived: a user experience (UX) designer. They take your sitemap and turn it into wireframes, which are working prototypes of every page and menu on your website.
- Content Acquisition: Shopping and Packing
Although buying and packing can be enjoyable for some people (like me! ), most people find this stage to be exhausting.
Because the arrangement of your remodelled house is not the same as the layout of your old house, you cannot expect everything to line up without effort. You may have significantly increased your services or products, undergone a rebranding, or decided to enrich your content for better conversions and SEO.
- Interior Design with Style Tiles
While acquiring content, you get to experience everyone's favourite step of all: genuine web design.
As a web designer in Charleston SC, we use your brand guidelines, kickoff research, and a separate brand kickoff meeting to investigate how you want visitors to feel in your house, what impression they should have, and your business personality. This is all utilised to make style tiles.