Site Design & Development
If this were easy, every site would be a winner
 
 In most cases, the reason for taking any product to market is to make
 money for the company. To make money, you must increase market
 dominance and survive. To survive, you must make the company profitable
 in a competitive world, now including the web. In order to compete in
 the market and to possibly be a major industry player, you need to:
- Have a quality product
 - Have a targeted market for your product
 - Operate a web site worth talking or writing about
 - Provide solutions to day-to-day problems (content)
 - Be a “daily use” web site
 - Develop a strong following
 - Make others aware of your presence
 
It is obvious that with the proper ingredients and talent that you
 can make this happen. Part of the ingredients is a technology solution,
 and part of it is a marketing solution. 
Technology, in the form of an internet Web Site, can either chase
 away or entrap prospects. Much like an ad, it must compel a surfer to
 want to spend time at the site. And much like an ad it must hook the
 visitor. But it even more closely resembles the curb appeal of a home
 for sale. The visitor knows in advance that the seller wants to sell.
 The visitor has already identified themselves as a potential buyer
 simply by visiting. But a visitor chooses to see the inside of the house
 only if they like the look of the property from their car window where
 they make the choice to park and visit or to speed away. A well designed
 web site offers appropriate curb appeal, and compels and entraps
 visitors. 
Marketing is making the world believe you even if you are wrong,
 and in the case of being right, it is making the world believe that you
 are bigger than life. A good marketing program can turn dreams into
 reality. For years companies have been selling products that don’t
 exist. Venture capitalists have invested millions of dollars based upon a
 product concept long before it is ready for sale. Marketing is getting
 the consumer to invest in a product that does exist by focusing on the
 real and imaginary contributions and how well they match the needs of
 the client.
Have a quality Web Site:
 Does your Web Site present a clear message that addresses a compelling
 need? Is it robust, offering an intuitive user interface, especially in
 the area of navigation? Does your site describe why a client needs your
 product in one sentence? Does the client understand that your product is
 their desired solution, and that they will receive a professionally
 packaged, working, and properly supported solution? Clients hate
 surprises, so make sure there are none. 
Have a targeted market for your product: Is
 there existing or potential market size to support the sale of your
 product at your selected price point? Do you have a plan to achieve
 top-of-mind recall and brand name recognition as a quality supplier to
 this market? Does your Web Site talk about both your product and your
 competition in an intelligent way? Does your market traditionally
 respond to ads, promotions, direct mail, conferences, trade shows, and
 other marketing programs? Are the decision makers (people that sign off
 on the order) able to order online, or are they discouraged by having to
 print and mail a form? Do you sell to large businesses in the thousands
 of units, or to small businesses or individuals a few units at a time?
 Does your market depend upon seasonal, economic, or sexual
 characteristics? This requires a comprehensive review of lifestyles,
 habits, hobbies, legal and environmental trends, work habits, emerging
 technology, chat topics, and demographics of content hungry consumers.
 In other words, do you have a clear image of your ideal consumer, and a
 definable way to reach them? Even if the answer is yes, there still
 needs to be enough potential to justify the process. Given this, please
 proceed….. 
Operate a web site worth talking or writing about: This
 can be accomplished by carefully considering what the user wants and
 needs from your site. It is an accurate assessment that a successful Web
 Site is one where the user has enhanced access to compelling content
 and products with absolutely no barriers to having them buy a product.
 What can we tell the user that they may not already know? And how can we
 make the user need that content on a daily basis? 
Provide solutions to day-to-day problems:
 If you look at your dominant web competition, those other Web Sites are
 popular because they meet a need of their targeted users. It is
 important to understand market direction and hot issues, and to develop a
 content strategy based upon emerging global marketplace trends. A
 thorough analysis of the needs of the targeted visitor helps you to
 understand what else can be offered to help users manage their lives.
 And once the data is available, if you can make the user crave it you
 will be on your way to a runaway success. 
Be a “daily use” Web Site:
 This is a characteristic of every successful site. Every other
 significant Web Site was able to establish themselves through frequent
 use patterns. After a while it becomes impossible to consider life
 without them. It is just as important that your site be used on a daily
 basis. Give the user something they need and is habit forming, and you
 have frequent use.
Develop a strong following:
 In order to be a leader, you need a following. To have a following, you
 need all of the above, and support. A fan club will follow their star
 as long as that star meets their needs and is constantly newsworthy.
 That takes the form of offering unique content better than any other Web
 Site, or in having that content be unavailable (or at least
 inconvenient) through any other means. If you can get the support of
 other strategic partners through reciprocal link programs then their Web
 Site becomes symbiotic, and probably synergistic, and the relationship
 will create a following for the product. 
Make others aware of your presence:
 This is purely a marketing effort. The identified need must be clear
 and compelling to properly design a strong communications program for
 awareness, for rankings, for reviews, for awards, and eventually to
 support a following. Properly done, a continuing search engine program
 and (probably) a reciprocal link program will be key components in your
 marketing plan. These are basic building blocks to product success.
 Provided that the product you are promoting through your site meets each
 of the above characteristics.
Consider a professional Web Site designer:
 This takes the form of a commercial suggestion. You want a site in
 order to promote your services. It must be classy, maybe a little bit
 elegant, and certainly it will serve as a testimonial to the
 capabilities your firm brings to your clients. You are probably dealing
 with a home page, services page (or more), a “who we are” page, a
 testimonials page, some free content throughout your site, probably on a
 few pages, press releases, a contact page (with a form), and maybe a
 couple of more pages. You are possibly needing e-commerce, but if you do
 then there is a data base, five to ten ordering and confirmation pages,
 a lot of purchased software, and triple the complexity and monthly
 operating costs. It is not too easy to guesstimate as to the scope of
 your project without additional information, but based on all of the
 sites that we have designed a small site as described above would take a
 developer about 7 to 8 weeks to develop. Our design is integrated with a
 full SEO Siloing architecture, keyword selection, and W3C
 implementation. Our projects start at 40 pages and are priced at $800
 per page delivered. Content writing is an extra fee.
For you to do it yourself starting from ground zero would take 8 to
 12 weeks for something nice (probably costing far more than your salary
 for the same time) but it would be what you wanted. The hard part is
 that the web changes daily, and finding something that you want (as a
 model that you can copy) is not too easy. I suspect that this option is a
 greater risk than using a professional designer. 
Do it yourself: Surf the web looking for sites that you find
 artistically appealing and print/ bookmark them all. You will need to
 purchase tools for editing the site graphics, and maybe a page editor
 like MS Frontpage or something else. Get comments from others about
 which sample page formats they like, and then copy that page. Edit the
 text and graphics to be your information and get feedback. Then use what
 you have learned from books on web development to re-engineer the HTML
 in your own commands to be to your enhanced format, your specific
 content, and your targeted market. 
Personally, if you need it fast, hire someone to build your Web
 Site for you. After all, is web design your business, or is it simply a
 business tool?! 
Hope this helps.