The rise of the smart site: How web design is driving business growth

Aug 5, 2019 | Ads, Content marketing

A new white paper from Kayo demonstrates how web design and development can drive business growth.

A new white paper from Kayo demonstrates how web design and development can drive business growth.

Kent-based technical agency, Kayo, has launched a new report, exploring how effective web design and development can drive business growth.

Entitled ‘The rise of the smart site’, the report demonstrates how your website can act as your most powerful business development manager, if harnessed and optimised correctly as part of a wider web strategy.

The report highlights how against a backdrop of ever-evolving customer expectations, a growing number of channels and routes to market and competitors on all sides, your website is a hugely powerful tool to help build brand awareness and drive business growth.

It also reveals the most common stumbling blocks many businesses face when it comes to developing their websites, which ultimately mean that they’re not getting even a fraction of the value that a well thought out, executed and optimised site can add. These include:

1. Treating it as a vanity project

2. Not properly understanding your customers

3. Underestimating the importance of messaging

4. Viewing it as a one-off project

5. Not having an overarching web strategy

Importantly, the report also outlines the vital questions organisations need to ask themselves before embarking on a web project, as well as the key steps the steps to future-proofing your web development. These include:

1. Do your research
Take the time to thoroughly research your customer base before embarking on any project.

2. Consider a bespoke solution
An off the shelf web solution may seem more cost-effective, but in the long run it could end up costing you more.

3. Optimise, optimise, optimise
In order to drive maximum value from your site, you need to continuously look at ways to optimise it.

Commenting on the report, Kris Jeary, Head of Design at Kayo Digital says: “We may be witnessing the death of the salesman and it being reincarnated in a smarter, slicker and more effective version – your website.

“If designed, developed and optimised correctly as part of a wider web strategy, your website can be your most vital business development tool. In fact, we encourage businesses to look at their website as their business development manager working 24/7 and taking no holiday. In the same way that you would invest in training and developing a business manager, you also need to invest in making sure your website is continuously optimised.

“While this may seem a daunting task, with the right expertise and support it is possible to develop a site that not only understands your customers, and changes to reflect their requirements, but also constantly gathers information about their likes, dislikes, wants and needs, in order to deliver an optimal customer experience.

“No one really knows what the future holds, but by having a website and strategy that can quickly adapt and respond to new channels, technologies and customer preferences, you will be able to meet whatever the future holds – head on. This is hugely important when staying ahead of the competition and stealing market share.

“To very loosely paraphrase Darwin, it isn’t necessarily the fittest who survive, but those who can most easily adapt to their environments.

“Any website has the potential to actively drive business growth in a cost-effective way. And with the right expert support, bespoke solution and strategy in place, your site can do so much more than you think.”

You can download the report here

Trending topics

IoT digital trends agencies adtech gover images hacker Netflix France digi tech data con Apple Spain local chri Gen Z’s consumer behaviours mean they’re rejecting marketers’ classic playbooks publishing marketing hospitality Maps analytics uber new data can reveal. government Android growth hacking ai viral user generated content BBC adv retail internet use and this all stems from their demand for the truth restaurants newspapers Social YouTube whatsapp fmg Alibaba Italy so audio mobile internet Valentine's Day Microsoft digital Intelligence Latin America gumtree Education digital Intelligence dig d demographics re ema USA Christmas indonesia TikTok CX India Asia Pacific media croatia global Disney CSR VR mobile marketing Amazon AR adspend Agency WH Smith health Instagram Pinterest China financial services itv Australia nike innovation FMCG Yahoo adidas spotift Brazil apps soc christmas. video Singapore ski adt Privacy dig P&G Regulation Estonia Netherlands Wikipedia sport CRM consumer insight Coronavirus Facebook digital skills vodafone security smartphones design Ikea sky adobe Search music reddit Cannes content technology according to new research. broadband iPad ec three comScore Germany email games video blogging eBay PR Europe Snapchat Digital Case Studies ecommerce Wechat mobile Ireland Africa gambling Google KFC Entertainment Middle East Influencer Marketing Russia top story digital data infographic Travel brands Clothing automotive Left-leaning news sources were considerably more popular than right-leaning outlets in US ‘swing states’ in the run up to the 2020 presidential election charity gaming Huawei luxury UK Japan Twitter yout advertising Verizon digital marketing Samsung

All topics

Previous editions