Web Design Project Management Tips – Digital Marketing Madness


Web Design Project Management Phases


Each phase had very distinctive deliverables, goals, and a time line attached to it. When we move clients through it, they know when they’re leaving which phase and going into the next one.

Web Design Kickoff and Design

“The design phase,” is where we actually turn that strategy into some design files where we start slow and mark up some wireframes, and then we talk about the overall design and colors, schemes, fronts and all the different little pieces that come together to make a design.

You want to know whether or not…”Do you want to go into a total direction than what you have now, or you’re looking for something very similar to what you have now, but just brushing it up a little bit.”
You need to have that kick off meeting ahead of time, so that you can be going in the right direction at the beginning of the project.


Website Development Phase

Ideally, each phase has the goals carrying through it. Then at the end of the development phase what you have is your design brought to life in workable, clickable website that you can check out and it’s got all the different information you need, and all the different functionality you need.
The last is the launch, where you actually send it out there to the world.
Launching a Website

One of the things that I’ve always noticed is that, people tend to be maybe…a little bit of their perfectionism comes out in that phase where they say, “Oh, this isn’t quite exactly right here, I want to tweak that a little bit or that text on that page is a little bit off.” They hold off on going live on that new website until everything is perfect.
What ends up happening in reality is that your website is never perfect. It’s always changing. That can really stall things and we are going to talk about that in a little bit later. But that can definitely be a problem when it comes to picking that time to launch, and things can get stuck in that phase very easily.

You just have a list in post launch. You just go back and knock those out as long as it takes. You will always be tweaking it. I’d say the number one tip I have though for somebody taking on a website development project, is it’s going to take longer than you think.
That’s OK, because these are huge projects. Clients sometimes underestimate how big it is to launch a new website, and then they get to near the end of the design phase and they are ready to sign off, or ready to start the launch process and they get caught up on all the little details that aren’t perfect, because this is the front of their business out there in the world.
It’s a big deal and it should take a lot of time. It’s OK to spend a lot of time but like you said, at the same time you do have to pull the plug at the sometime, and launch the thing.
Common Pitfalls of a Web Design Project


You have to err on the side of over‑communicating, because if you’re miscommunicating on some details that perpetuates this viscous cycle where you don’t really understand each other.
It’s important to have a relationship where you understand each other in such a huge complicated project. When in doubt, over communicate even to the point of communicating with the client about how you are communicating. Do they prefer the phone or the email or do they want a big long list, or do they want everything broken down into little pieces of communication?


The other piece of that is critical to really listen when you’re communicating, because what the client is saying is different from what YOU think they should say, or what YOU think they should think about how their site is designed or built, because you as a marketer may know, well, obviously you need the home page to have X, Y and Z…


It’s their website. You have to really listen to what they want, and find the middle ground of what they want what you may know as the best practice and deliver something they are happy with that will also work.

Like you said, sometimes it’s OK, the client’s website is their website and they can do what they want, but as long as you are communicating to them the reasons of what you want to do and it’s not just arbitrary. That makes a big difference. How do you get a stalled project back on track?
We talked before about going into that launch phase and sometimes things can get stalled in that phase because we’re just waiting for every last little detail to be done when maybe it doesn’t have to be that way. There are other times when a project can get stalled. How do you get things back on track?
Getting a Stalled Web Design Project Back On Track

Because if there’s some breakdown, people aren’t understanding each other. Sometimes all it will take it somebody who hasn’t been involved at all to hear both sides and understand where the breakdown was, just being the fresh set of ears and eyes on the project can help get things moving again.
Related to that – another way to do that is to approach it from another angle. So if there’s a specific element of the website that you just can’t get past, you just can’t get it right, then just put aside for right now. Go through all the things of the website that are good to go, and talk about maybe somewhere else where you can make some progress.
Maybe it’s much easier to get them to approve some images, swap those out and change the look of a couple of pages, and then you can go back to that one element of the site where you weren’t really able to get a consensus, or really get it to final. When you go back to it, sometimes, it’s not that important or everyone realizes you can always change it later.





Thanks for listening. I’m John Maher. See you next time on Digital Marketing Madness.




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