When you decide to build a website, you need to ask yourself whether you want a completely new, individual project or whether you prefer to use a ready-made solution. Ready-made themes mean a faster timeline, and if you have all the materials you can place there, the website should go live relatively quickly.
If, however, you plan to create the project from a sketch and add more elements during production, the process will take longer.
No matter whether your website is designed or you’ve purchased a ready-made theme, you should always make sure the brief is filled out thoroughly. The project specification explains a lot, and even you—seeing the project concept written down in one document—can imagine the outline of the full implementation.
Ready-made themes have their downsides. First of all, they’re available to everyone, so your website may look similar to others. They may also include a lot of unnecessary code (but developers can handle that). Themes sometimes break, and then we have to rely on support – and not every theme has the kind of support we’d want.
The advantages include a low price and the ability to see a finished sample website built using that theme. Often, it’s worth reviewing themes and creating a completely new project that includes only the features you really need.
Sometimes themes are used as examples for clients because it’s easier to discuss the future implementation and present a variety of possibilities.
When choosing a project “from scratch,” you’ll get an individual design – the so-called “tailor-made” solution. The price is slightly higher, but you end up with a completely new product.
No matter which option you choose, we’ll take care of the implementation professionally.