Quote:
Originally Posted by MickMcGeough
Maybe I'm misunderstanding but it sounds like you hired a company who offers web design/development as a bolt-on service to IT work. If I've got that right, this was your only serious mistake. Web design is not an IT skill. If you're serious about your brand's online presence, you need to hire someone who makes web design their core business.
I'll respectfully disagree with Rathji on the general Wordpress sentiment. There are applications it's not appropriate for, but I seriously doubt yours is one of them. But he's right that you need a good developer to work with it, and that if your developer starts talking about what theme to use, you have the wrong designer (unless your total budget for this is $500 or something, in which case you can ignore my entire post). The theme should be "killer_carlson's custom-built theme", and the project overall should be treated as any custom web design and development project would be.
(start rant)
The thing that kills me about so many freelancers and small web shops is that they sell a service instead of a product. They charge hourly, engage in lengthy back-and-forth with the customer, they change button colors, they make the logo bigger, they add "pop" when a customer asks, and usually don't know what user experience means. All of this is wrong. You'll know you've found a good web shop when they treat it like a product. They should be asking you the questions. You should leave your first objectives/requirements meeting with them surprised at how much stuff you never even thought of. It's their responsibility to extract all the information they need to deliver a product that delights their customer.
When you ask for a pile of changes, they should fight you on it because they're professional web designers and they've spent more time thinking about that button's color than you have. They shouldn't let you get away with giving it a once-over on an iPad - when they deliver the finished product to you it should be in person (if possible) and they should be taking you through every detail. Every product they deliver is an extension of their brand, and they should be excited to deliver it to you and to add it to their portfolio.
(end rant)
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I think you misunderstood my sentiment, because I agree with almost everything you said about it here. I probably wasn't very clear about it though.
The thing about Wordpress that is problematic, is any idiot with hosting can set up a site that actually functions, so they think they can claim they have the ability to make websites and charge people for it. If you are only capable of using a premade template, you are not a web designer, and shouldn't be selling your services as such.