Tag: diy

  • Before You Touch a Template: Decide What Your Website Should Actually Do

    Before You Touch a Template: Decide What Your Website Should Actually Do

    This article is for small business owners, freelancers, and other DIY website builders who want to plan their site properly before touching any template or theme.

    Itโ€™s Part 1 of my stepโ€‘byโ€‘step series on building (or rebuilding) your own website: from defining your intention, to a tiny website business plan, branding, tools, statistics, and SEO.

    You are ready to build (or rebuild) your website.
    Itโ€™s tempting to jump straight into colours, fonts, and templates โ€” but thatโ€™s exactly how so many small business and portfolio sites end up looking nice and doingโ€ฆ nothing. The problem is usually not your design skills. Itโ€™s that the website never had a clear job in the first place.

    In this article, weโ€™ll slow down before design and define what your website should actually achieve for you. Once youโ€™re decided that, choosing pages, tools, and content becomes much easier.
    In the next part of this series, weโ€™ll turn that into a tiny business plan for your website.

    Your website is not a decoration, itโ€™s a worker

    Think of your website as a quiet team member. It costs time and energy, so it should also have a real job.

    For small businesses and freelancers, a website can help you:

    • Get new enquiries or bookings.
    • Show that you are trustworthy and professional.
    • Explain what you do and how you help.
    • Showcase your work or experience.

    Larger companies often connect their website directly to business goals like leads, sales, or support requests, and small businesses benefit from doing the same in a simpler way.
    If your site exists โ€œjust to be there,โ€ it will be very hard to know what to put on it or how to judge if itโ€™s working.

    One main job, one helper job

    A big mistake many DIY website builders make is trying to do everything at once: blog, shop, membership, portfolio, newsletter, booking system, all from day one. The result is usually a confusing site that doesnโ€™t clearly lead visitors anywhere.

    Instead, use a simple rule:

    • Pick one primary job for your website.
    • Pick one helper job that supports the main one.

    Examples:

    • Service business (coach, consultant, therapist):
      • Primary job: Get people to book a first call or send an enquiry.
      • Helper job: Build trust by explaining your approach and sharing a few testimonials.
    • Creative portfolio (designer, photographer, developer):
      • Primary job: Get invited to interviews or project calls.
      • Helper job: Make your best 3โ€“5 projects very easy to find and understand.

    You can add more goals later, but starting with one main job and one helper keeps your decisions focused.

    Common โ€œjobsโ€ a website can do for you

    If youโ€™re not sure what your primary job should be, here are some common options websites are built around:

    • Trust and credibility
      Looking like a real, serious business or professional: clear information, consistent branding, real photos, and testimonials.
    • Leads and bookings
      Turning visitors into enquiries, discovery calls, bookings, trial lessons, or consultations.
    • Direct sales
      Selling products, digital downloads, or services directly on the site.
    • Information and support
      Answering common questions, sharing guides, or helping existing customers find what they need.
    • Showcasing work
      Presenting portfolio projects or case studies so people can quickly see what youโ€™re capable of.

    You might see yourself in more than one category, and thatโ€™s fine. The key is: choose which one comes first right now.

    A small exercise: 5 questions to define your websiteโ€™s job

    Grab a notebook or open a simple document. Take a few minutes to answer these questions honestly โ€” donโ€™t overthink.

    1. What do you need more of in the next 12 months?

    Do you need more:

    • enquiries,
    • bookings,
    • shop orders,
    • email subscribers,
    • or interview invitations?

    Your answer points directly toward your primary website goal.


    2. When someone leaves your site, what should be true?

    Imagine a visitor lands on your site and leaves again 5 minutes later.
    In an ideal world, what should be true when they go?

    Examples:

    • โ€œThey understand what I do and feel safe to contact me.โ€
    • โ€œThey have seen my three strongest projects and know how to reach me.โ€
    • โ€œThey have booked a first call.โ€

    Write down one sentence that describes this.


    3. If your website could only do one thing really well, what would it be?

    Forget about all the nice extras.
    If your website could only do one thing for you, what would you choose?

    • Get people to contact you.
    • Show your best work.
    • Explain your service clearly.
    • Process orders.

    Thatโ€™s your primary job.


    4. What is a good โ€œsecond jobโ€ that supports the first?

    Now pick one smaller goal that helps your main one.

    Examples:

    • If your primary job is โ€œget enquiries,โ€ a helper job could be โ€œbuild trust with a simple About page and 2โ€“3 testimonials.โ€
    • If your primary job is โ€œshow my portfolio,โ€ a helper job could be โ€œmake it easy to download my CV.โ€

    This will stop your site from trying to be everything at once.


    5. What do you not want your website to do (for now)?

    Saying no is just as important.

    Maybe you donโ€™t want:

    • a blog yet,
    • an online shop yet,
    • a membership area,
    • or complex integrations.

    Guides for small businesses regularly warn against adding features you wonโ€™t maintain โ€” they create clutter without supporting your real goals.
    Write down what youโ€™re not doing yet. You can always add it later.

    How clear goals turn into pages

    Once you know your websiteโ€™s main job, deciding which pages you need becomes simpler.

    For example:

    • Consultant or coach
      • Primary job: Get discovery calls.
      • Core pages: Home, Services, About, Contact.
      • Homepage focus: who you help, what problem you solve, and a clear โ€œBook a callโ€ or โ€œRequest infoโ€ button.
    • Creative portfolio (designer, developer, photographer)
      • Primary job: Get interview invitations or project requests.
      • Core pages: Home, Portfolio/Projects, About, Contact.
      • Homepage focus: your strongest work and a clear โ€œView portfolioโ€ or โ€œWork with meโ€ callโ€‘toโ€‘action.

    Website strategy guides often recommend planning goals and sitemap before design, because it keeps the site focused and easier to navigate for visitors.

    If you want to go deeper into which pages you really need and what to put on them, Iโ€™ll cover that in a separate article about essential website pages.

    How your goals influence design (without jargon)

    You donโ€™t have to be a designer to use your goals to guide basic design decisions.

    • If your main job is getting enquiries or bookings:
      • You want a simple layout, clear buttons, and forms that are easy to find and use.
      • Your headings should quickly explain what you do and who you help.
    • If your main job is showing your work:
      • You want strong, clean project images or screenshots, with short, clear descriptions.
      • Navigation should make it easy to jump between projects and to your contact page.

    Most smallโ€‘business advice agrees that clarity, readable text, and mobileโ€‘friendly layouts are much more important than fancy visual effects.

    Be honest about your time and energy

    One last reality check: your website job should match your real life.

    Ask yourself:

    • How many hours per month can I realistically spend updating my site?
    • Do I truly have time to maintain a blog or shop right now?
    • What will I still be happy to do six months from now?

    Maintenance and strategy guides emphasise that a simple, focused website that you can actually care for will usually perform better than a big, ambitious one that you never update.

    Itโ€™s perfectly okay to start with a small, clear website whose main job is โ€œshow I exist and make it easy to contact meโ€ โ€” and grow from there.

    Wrapโ€‘up: your oneโ€‘sentence website job

    By now you should have notes for:

    • what you need more of,
    • what should be true when visitors leave,
    • your primary job,
    • your helper job,
    • and things you are not doing yet.

    Try to put it into one simple sentence, like:

    • โ€œMy websiteโ€™s main job is to get local clients to book a first call, and its helper job is to show I am trustworthy and experienced.โ€
    • โ€œMy websiteโ€™s main job is to get me interviews as a junior web designer, and its helper job is to make my best projects easy to explore.โ€

    This one sentence will guide all your next decisions.

    Once youโ€™ve written your oneโ€‘sentence website job, youโ€™re ready for Part 2: your tiny website business plan, where we connect your goals, your audience, and your offer so you know exactly what content you need on which page.

    FAQ: Before You Start Building Your Website

    Do I really need to define goals before I start designing?

    Strictly speaking, youย canย start designing without clear goals, but most small business and marketing guides agree that it leads to more rework, unfocused content, and weaker results. Defining the main job of your website first makes every other decision easier: which pages you need, what to write, and where to send people next.

    What if I have several goals for my website?

    Thatโ€™s normal. The key is to chooseย one primary goalย for right now (for example โ€œget enquiriesโ€ or โ€œshow portfolioโ€) and treat the others as secondary for later. Websites that try to chase too many goals at once usually feel confusing and do not guide visitors to a clear next step.

    Iโ€™m not sure what I need more: enquiries, visibility, or sales. How do I decide?

    Look at the next 6โ€“12 months of your real life: Do you need more client enquiries, more authority and trust, or actual online sales? Pick the one that would make the biggest difference to your business or career right now and build your website around that first โ€” you can always adjust as you learn.

    Can a simple โ€œbusiness cardโ€ website still be useful?

    Yes. A small, focused site with clear contact information, a short explanation of what you do, and a strong callโ€‘toโ€‘action can already support many freelancers and local businesses. Itโ€™s better to have a simple site that clearly does its job than a complex one you never finish or maintain.

    What if I start DIY and later decide I want professional help?

    Thatโ€™s a common path. Planning your websiteโ€™s job now means that, if you later hire a designer or developer, you already know your goals and target audience โ€” which saves time and money and usually leads to a better result. Many web professionals actually begin their process by asking clients the same questions youโ€™ve just answered in this article.

    Where does SEO fit into all of this?

    SEO works best when it supports clear goals. Search and UX guides emphasise that you need to knowย whatย you want visitors to do before you drive more traffic to a site. In this series, weโ€™ll first decide the job of your website, then create a small plan, then handle branding, tools, stats, and finally SEO โ€” in that order.

    Ready for support with this step?

    Here are two ways I can help you move from โ€œthinking about itโ€ to having a clear plan (and, if you want, a finished website).

    Option 1 โ€“ 1:1 planning session

    Ready to define your websiteโ€™s job together?
    If youโ€™re stuck between โ€œI want to do it myselfโ€ and โ€œI donโ€™t want to mess it up,โ€ I offer 1:1 strategy sessions for small businesses and freelancers in Europe.
    In 60 minutes, we clarify what your website should do, which pages you actually need, and your next concrete steps.

    ๐Ÿ‘‰ Want help with this step? Book a strategy call or send me a short message with where you are now and what youโ€™d like your website to do.

    Option 2 โ€“ Doneโ€‘forโ€‘you WordPress website

    Prefer not to do it alone?
    If youโ€™d rather have someone build a clear, easyโ€‘toโ€‘manage WordPress site based on the goals youโ€™ve just defined, I design and develop websites for European small businesses and solo professionals.
    Weโ€™ll start with a simple planning call and then Iโ€™ll take care of the technical setup, structure, and launch.

    ๐Ÿ‘‰ Curious if weโ€™re a good fit? Learn more about my website packages or get in touch for a short, noโ€‘pressure call.