Having a captivating website that delivers a positive online experience is pivotal to business success in this day and age. To highlight the importance of a good website for your business, take a look at these eye-opening statistics:
- First impressions on websites are 94% design-related.
- 75% of consumers admit to making judgements on a company’s credibility based on the company’s website design.
- 88% of online consumers are less likely to return to a site after a bad experience.
In order to develop a well-functioning website that relates to your business, you need a write a thorough website design brief.
What is a website design brief?
The purpose of a creative website design brief is to provide a clear-cut understanding of what’s expected from the website project. They provide an in-depth look at your business, your objectives, desired features and deliverables. As well as a thought-out schedule and a post-launch support plan.
How to write a website design brief?
1. It’s all about YOU!
Your website should reflect you as a business. It’s a creative space to express yourself. So, in order to help designers understand your business write out an overview of your business. Including a mission & vision statement, values, future plans and the brand image you want to promote to your audience. Make it specific, emphasising what differentiates you from your competitors. Do you have a unique selling point?
It’s important to include your contact information here too and any stakeholders. It will improve relationships and communication throughout the project.
2. Project overview
What’s the big idea? A project overview should consist of what you actually want to achieve from the website. What type of conversion do you want from it? This should include the page for page content, branding and tone of voice you want to implement.
Old website owners only: If you already own an existing website then you’ll need an additional step. Analyse your current/old website by looking at any technical issues (page errors, mobile responsiveness, poor UX, loading speed etc) and functionality. Looking at how you can improve navigation, presentation, usability and accessibility.
3. Define your goals
Thereafter, you’ll need to set yourself some SMART targets. Specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-based goals that will help you measure success. This will further help designers understand what you want to achieve. For example, this might be:
- Increase conversion rate by 2% in the first 6 months of the website launch.
- Increase time spent on the page by 5-10 seconds in the first 3 months of the website launch.