All you want to know is “What is a realistic budget?” yet all you keep hearing is “It depends on...” so let's look at why.
There are two key factors that will have the greatest influence on the ultimate cost, and therefore the investment you need to make in your website. These are scope and risk.
In simple terms, what do you want the website to do and how will it impact your business? Consider the following questions:
- Do you need a basic, brochure site designed to be a 'shop window' to your business?
- Or are you after a fully functioning e-commerce site or event management system?
- Perhaps you need an enterprise level, back office solution for thousands of people to use to carry out the day-to-day business processes that keep your business running?
- How business critical is the website to your overall operations?
- What sort of data handling and storage requirements do you have?
- What legal implications affect your website?
- Does your site need to handle a lot of traffic and/or data quickly?
- Do you need 24/7 uptime?
- Do you need uptime monitoring?
- What if the something goes wrong?
Your answers will dictate whether you're looking at a build that will take a few days, a few weeks or several months of development time.
If you're not sure where you may be on this spectrum, you may find it useful to read this article about what you need to know before you engage a web company.
Generally speaking, the bigger the solution, the more it will cost, so if you think you might be restricted by your budget, you should think about;
- What is your 'minimum viable product'?
- What are the 'must-haves', 'should-haves' and 'nice-to-haves'?
Let's dive in to the 6 ways you can manage the biggest cost factors of your website project.