Buyer Beware
Whatever the size of your business, your website is likely to constitute a sizeable investment from your marketing budget. So, when you commit time and resources to commissioning your first site, or revamping your existing one, you want to feel secure that you are working with a company you can trust and rely on.
In a time when so many activities are closely regulated and subject to scrutiny, it's difficult to understand that there is still so little regulation within the IT sector. Whilst there is a range of national and international standards for governing IT security, direct governance for those on the design and development end of the process is less stringent. That said, regulation would be burdensome, costly and could potentially be prohibitive for freelance developers to stay in business at all. In turn, this would mean some businesses may not be able to access web developers at all.
As a result of the low barrier to entry, there is very little to prevent companies using advanced marketing techniques in order to portray themselves as “experts in web development”. The onus is on the client to check the competency of their chosen provider.
At first, maybe that doesn't sound too alarming. After all, many of us take a 'Buyer Beware' approach to most significant decisions in business and in life. However, don't we all also seek experts when the purchase we need to make is something outside our personal area of expertise? A collective appetite for self-regulation and customer education would go a long way to helping customers though.
The chances are, if you're not running a tech company with an in-house web development expert, you have gone to the market to procure the expert skills you, and your business, lack. It's likely you've undertaken an element of due diligence – perhaps seeking recommendations, reading reviews and holding interviews. But ultimately, at some point, you make the decision to engage a supplier who has convinced you they are sufficiently competent to meet your requirements.
On this basis, let's stop and have a think about the implications if that supplier subsequently fails to deliver a functional and effective website.
- You will have spent money, time and resources with nothing to show for it.
- It's likely that you won't have had the technical expertise to robustly challenge the project progress or updates the developer was giving you.
- You have an ineffective website that doesn't support your business objectives.
- You risk having a site which has security weaknesses and exposes your clients, and your own business, to significant data breaches.
- All the above leads to catastrophic reputational damage.