In this episode.
Speaker:I'm gonna talk about what we are really selling when we are selling websites
Speaker:because if you are not doing it this way, you're getting it wrong.
Speaker:And when you're getting it wrong, you're leaving money on
Speaker:the table and no one wants that.
Speaker:Hi, and welcome to another episode of Websites Made
Speaker:Simple with me, Holly Christie.
Speaker:I'm a website designer.
Speaker:I'm a website designer's mentor, and I have this podcast to help you.
Speaker:Have a brilliant web design career without burning out in the process.
Speaker:So today I'm talking about what we're really selling when we are selling
Speaker:websites, because it's all well and good for us to say, oh yeah, you'll end up
Speaker:with a five page website, or a 10 page website, or an e-commerce store, or
Speaker:whatever it is that the client wants.
Speaker:But that's not really what they're buying from us because they can get whatever
Speaker:it is they're wanting from anyone.
Speaker:In fact, with all the DIY tools.
Speaker:They can do it themselves.
Speaker:We all know how that's gonna work out if they trying to do it themselves,
Speaker:but you know, people can be stubborn What we're really selling is the
Speaker:experience, and what I really wanna help you to do using this podcast is to.
Speaker:Of the websites I've built or the quantity of the websites I've built or
Speaker:the models that I've put out there, yes, they have all been contributing factors,
Speaker:but what's really made people sign up to work with me, pay the big bucks to
Speaker:work with me has been the experience they have when we work together.
Speaker:So let's look at it together.
Speaker:This all starts with the discovery call and.
Speaker:you may have an intake form where that's how you get your clients on board.
Speaker:you might do it over email, you'll have your own processes, but I
Speaker:always recommend a discovery call.
Speaker:First of all, I think that they are easier to convert people on because
Speaker:you're not going back and forth on email.
Speaker:You are not accidentally using jargon that they don't understand.
Speaker:You can really get a lot.
Speaker:From each other on a Zoom call from understanding what they want.
Speaker:There's also that opportunity to screen share.
Speaker:As a creative, I often get a lot of ideas when people are talking to me
Speaker:about the type of website they want, and I can pull up ideas and say, this
Speaker:is something I built recently, or this is something I built a while ago.
Speaker:I think this could really help or that could really help.
Speaker:It also means that people can say, oh, I really like this website.
Speaker:And they can share their screen and show you what they like.
Speaker:And it makes it so much easier for people to invest in working with you,
Speaker:to have confidence in working with you and to have an understanding of
Speaker:what their end product is gonna be.
Speaker:So if you don't already have a discovery call as part of your
Speaker:process, I would really recommend that you put them in there.
Speaker:They only have to be 15 minutes.
Speaker:They can be pre-booked to a time that suits you from your calendar.
Speaker:But go ahead and do that.
Speaker:So the next thing I want to look at is the follow up from that discovery
Speaker:call, because in the creative industry, we're not known for our admin prowess.
Speaker:Now I'll say I am known for being good at admin, but one of the things
Speaker:that I'm not always on my game with is the follow up on the calls.
Speaker:And seriously, if you're not following up, the people who have already
Speaker:been in touch with you, that's where you really are leaving money on
Speaker:the table because people get busy.
Speaker:People lose your details.
Speaker:People rely on you to contact them, and often people will make the
Speaker:decision, particularly if they're at the point where they're ready to buy.
Speaker:And hopefully you've listened to other episodes of this podcast.
Speaker:Building your personal brand and you know a bit about your marketing and
Speaker:you've got your processes in place.
Speaker:And so hopefully by the time people come onto that discovery call,
Speaker:they're 80% of the way there.
Speaker:those people are going to make their decision about whether
Speaker:they work with you or not.
Speaker:Very quickly after that call.
Speaker:In fact, there is some research that I was told that people make the swiftest
Speaker:decisions within 15 minutes of that call So you want to be able to get
Speaker:in there with your follow up and that will be an email that summarises what
Speaker:you discussed on the call or what they're looking for, what your services
Speaker:are, how much it's gonna cost, and you need to get that out to them.
Speaker:I like to have a template written for this already, which is called like Your Website
Speaker:Journey and the next steps, and it has the main body of the email is already written.
Speaker:So all I need to do is come off that call write in the type of website that
Speaker:the person's looking for, anything like specific that we've discussed.
Speaker:the price and I can get that email straight off to them.
Speaker:And that really does make a difference because it doesn't break my workflow
Speaker:because I'm already in that discovery call kind of time slots, if you will.
Speaker:it also means that I can just tick that as another done from the list.
Speaker:I have a group mentoring program called Sparks Group Mentoring.
Speaker:We meet it's website designers, developers, and SEO
Speaker:specialists and copywriters.
Speaker:We meet every Wednesday between one and two o'clock, always comes up
Speaker:in the group when we are talking about web design, running our
Speaker:business and our processes, our.
Speaker:Automated processes that we can put in place and the follow up is one of those
Speaker:that we can do as well and we can take that further to send a follow up after
Speaker:three days, after five days, after seven days, whatever feels right for you.
Speaker:Do make sure you follow up at least twice.
Speaker:I would say ideally three times.
Speaker:If you haven't heard from them after three emails, then send a final email saying,
Speaker:shall I remove you from my database?
Speaker:And that usually will kick someone into either say, oh, no, no,
Speaker:sorry, I was just really busy.
Speaker:Or saying, yeah, thank you so much.
Speaker:I've decided to go elsewhere, or whatever.
Speaker:It's that we're doing.
Speaker:So the next part of the process.
Speaker:If you've listened to me before, you know what I'm gonna say Are your contracts?
Speaker:Because it is so important and so many website designers don't
Speaker:have the proper contracts.
Speaker:Contracts which protect them or protect their clients, and by protecting them,
Speaker:we're talking about things like licensing.
Speaker:You'd be really surprised how many clients will.
Speaker:Take photos from a website or a stock photo site or from a supplier's
Speaker:site without checking whether they have the right licensing for it.
Speaker:if you are looking to just get the website built, you may think,
Speaker:oh yeah, the photos are in.
Speaker:That's brilliant.
Speaker:Off we go.
Speaker:you could end up being sued by the whoever owns those photos.
Speaker:You've used them without certain license.
Speaker:I've known this happened to agencies.
Speaker:I knew an agency that was shut down because of it, because they couldn't
Speaker:afford to pay for all of the, uh, website projects where they'd used, uh,
Speaker:photos without the correct licenses.
Speaker:So you need a contract that's going to cover you and cover your clients,
Speaker:if you don't have a contract.
Speaker:Go to websitesmadesimple.co.uk.
Speaker:You will find my website designers contract pack on there.
Speaker:It has absolutely every contract, which is UK Law compliant, and it'll make sure that
Speaker:you are covered and you are protected for the entire process of the website build
Speaker:and working with the clients working.
Speaker:And that includes the contracts for actually building the website.
Speaker:It includes the terms of service, which goes into things like
Speaker:licensing for fonts and for images.
Speaker:when payments are made and what happens if a client ghosts you.
Speaker:It also has working with associates contracts and it has hosting
Speaker:agreement contracts as well.
Speaker:So if you don't have all of these things in place, that is your
Speaker:one stop shop where you can.
Speaker:Go and get these contracts from one-off price.
Speaker:They, you can, they're white label ones, so you can put your
Speaker:own branding on and you'll be protected and sorted straight away.
Speaker:But do make sure you've got good contracts in place.
Speaker:Make sure you do not start building a website without the contracts in place
Speaker:as well, and having really robust.
Speaker:And fair contracts, you don't want to absolutely screw your client over here
Speaker:will also show your client that you are a really professional setup and it'll
Speaker:give them confidence in working with you.
Speaker:when people have confidence in working with you, they generally pay more
Speaker:money to have that experience as well.
Speaker:double whammy is one.
Speaker:You are protected, you're looking professional, you've got something you
Speaker:can rely on, and you're making good money from it in the process as well.
Speaker:Within my website, designers contract pack, and I promise you this isn't,
Speaker:this podcast isn't a whole advert forward, but in the terms of service,
Speaker:it goes into the website design process.
Speaker:Now, we'll all have our different processes.
Speaker:Mine uses my website designer's onboarding pack as well, which kind
Speaker:of goes with the contract pack to help clients to submit information to me.
Speaker:So it's got a booklet, an editable booklet that the client can
Speaker:submit their website content in.
Speaker:It tells them what images to send, how to check for licenses, how to send them.
Speaker:It's got absolutely everything there.
Speaker:So when someone signs up with me.
Speaker:We agree, a start date.
Speaker:I send them the onboarding pack.
Speaker:I agree a date that they'll send that back to me.
Speaker:I do have a check in process as well to make sure they're all okay
Speaker:with it, and then back it comes.
Speaker:There's a brilliant website designer called Kane Mitchell.
Speaker:He's part of my Sparks Group Mentoring program.
Speaker:He has a brilliant way of doing it.
Speaker:He starts with a two hour call with the client, and he gets the
Speaker:content from them on that call.
Speaker:He also uses AI to help them along.
Speaker:It's a brilliant, brilliant process, and it means that.
Speaker:His client just has to show up for the call and they don't have to do all the
Speaker:work behind the scenes of, you know, gathering this and gathering that.
Speaker:So I'm certainly not going to tell you how to do your process.
Speaker:There's so many different ways to do it, but make sure you have a
Speaker:really robust process in place.
Speaker:And for me, that is making sure that my clients hear from me at set times.
Speaker:Even if I don't have an update for them, I will still message them on that time
Speaker:and say, there isn't an update this week because I'm right in the middle
Speaker:of all of this with your project.
Speaker:But next week, you know, we'll be back on track it really helps.
Speaker:The industry has such a bad reputation for website designers, ghosting clients.
Speaker:it's really hard because the client just feels so powerless, I always
Speaker:want the experience of working with me to feel like a collaborative one.
Speaker:that can't happen if I don't contact the client if I'm just head down in the work.
Speaker:I have a process of how many weeks a website is built over for custom builds.
Speaker:This is generally six weeks to the first draft, and then I will contact them every
Speaker:week with a video update, which will be kind of three to four minutes long.
Speaker:It just walks them through the progress that's been made on the website.
Speaker:It invites their feedback, it invites their opinion,
Speaker:but it also explains to them.
Speaker:What I've done and why, so I might say, I've used this color for this.
Speaker:I really liked that sentence, so I pulled it into a heading and moved it here.
Speaker:I've put this image here because of this, because I feel it does that, and what
Speaker:I found was the more that I explained what I had done and how I had done it.
Speaker:The more on board clients got with it, and then the less edits I had to make
Speaker:to the website afterwards as opposed to the very, very old days where I
Speaker:would just go away, build a website to first draft and then send it off to
Speaker:them and then get a list of 56 changes.
Speaker:This process was a lot smoother and the clients have all come back and
Speaker:said they really love the process 'cause they love feeling involved.
Speaker:They like seeing the week by week progress of it, and they feel that they've had a
Speaker:real input within their website as well.
Speaker:And it does mean also if they suggest something that doesn't feel right,
Speaker:I can come back to them and say, I don't think that's gonna work.
Speaker:And I can either show them why it won't work, or I can explain it to them.
Speaker:But either way, it usually has a really good, experience for both of us.
Speaker:The next thing.
Speaker:I really want to talk about is about knowing where your role
Speaker:as a website designer ends and another professional's role begins.
Speaker:And if you haven't listened to it already, I would urge you to go and
Speaker:listen to the episode with Nikki, who is the absolute queen of SEO.
Speaker:She's been an SEO specialist for over 30 years, and we did a
Speaker:podcast episode together around where a web designer's role.
Speaker:With SEO and where an SEO specialist begins, and it's the difference
Speaker:between a website being SEO friendly, which is what we are building as web
Speaker:designers, so we're making sure that our headings are in the right place.
Speaker:We're making sure that our images are the right size, that things
Speaker:are labeled correctly, that the website's fast and loading.
Speaker:That sort of thing.
Speaker:But the actual search engine optimization of writing content and updating and
Speaker:tagging and things like that, that all belongs to an SEO specialist.
Speaker:And in that, I would include the setting up Google Search Console
Speaker:and Google my business pages.
Speaker:I know some website designers like to do this, but it's not
Speaker:really your role to do that.
Speaker:I would say if you are given the Google search console tracking code, it is
Speaker:your role to put that in the site, but do be quite firm between what you do
Speaker:within a website build and what gets handed over to somebody else as well.
Speaker:And if you have someone else for the role, whether that's a copywriter, if
Speaker:they're looking for copywriting or a branding designer, if they're looking
Speaker:for brand or if it's a search engine specialist. Do have people
Speaker:you can work with and it's so easy to find good people to work with as well.
Speaker:But if you need a recommendation, you can always contact me at Hello
Speaker:websites made Simple UK, or find me on LinkedIn and I'd be happy to
Speaker:recommend someone for you as well.
Speaker:Next, decide what your aftercare is gonna look like.
Speaker:Some people like to book in like a two hour training slot over Zoom
Speaker:with their clients and they say they'll teach them everything.
Speaker:They'll record the session.
Speaker:This isn't my favorite way of doing it because I think that people
Speaker:get quite overwhelmed by tech.
Speaker:I mean, bear in mind, if you don't work within websites, it's not something
Speaker:you're gonna be massively familiar with, and it then means that they will
Speaker:have to keep going back and watching this two hour video to try and find
Speaker:the spot where they learn how to change some text or do this or that For me.
Speaker:I create website manuals for the clients, and the manual is A PDF that
Speaker:has videos that I've recorded in Vimeo.
Speaker:A lot of them are standard.
Speaker:This is how you change text on your website.
Speaker:This is how you upload an image to your website.
Speaker:This is how you add to the menu or change this or that.
Speaker:And then there will be a couple of videos, one, which I always just call welcome
Speaker:to your website that walks you around the structure of where everything is.
Speaker:Which plugins are on there, that sort of thing.
Speaker:And then I send this off to the client at the end of the build.
Speaker:And it also has things like how to log in and that sort of thing.
Speaker:it means that they always, always have a working document
Speaker:of how to use their website.
Speaker:It also means that if they want to get a VA to update their website,
Speaker:they can send this document to the VA.
Speaker:And it's just really useful for all involved.
Speaker:Because I have a standardized PDF, which I have built in Canva, so I can just copy
Speaker:it each time and change that welcome video and the information on the front page.
Speaker:It doesn't take a lot of time for me to create, but it's absolutely
Speaker:invaluable for my clients as well.
Speaker:So do make sure you are not just sending them off the website with a
Speaker:login and, uh, wishing them Godspeed, which I know we have all done,
Speaker:especially in the early days, but, uh, it's not how we do it anymore.
Speaker:And finally, you should be knowing what your websites are doing.
Speaker:I will often have clients who come to me and say, oh my goodness, I've just
Speaker:made a sale from my website and it's only been up for a couple of days.
Speaker:Or, you know, thank you so much.
Speaker:I've had some inquiries.
Speaker:If you are managing the maintenance and hosting of the website, you may
Speaker:see the inquiries that are coming through on the contact forms.
Speaker:And things like that.
Speaker:but do make sure that you check in with your clients regularly, that you
Speaker:have an idea the results that are being created from these websites, because
Speaker:that is what a website's meant to do.
Speaker:The websites are here to bring in leads and to make sales, and you need to make
Speaker:sure that they're doing that because if they're not, you might need to maybe have
Speaker:a little bit of mentoring to find out what's not working about your websites.
Speaker:You may need to look at your build process or.
Speaker:it could be something to do with the website copy's not strong enough and
Speaker:you need to really put your foot down and insist on a copywriter or having
Speaker:a copywriter that you can work with.
Speaker:They're all different ways and if you feel that your websites aren't being
Speaker:chosen and you are not being chosen as a website designer for it, then you
Speaker:are very welcome to book for one-to-one mentoring with me and we can untangle
Speaker:and work through that together as well.
Speaker:And if you'd like to.
Speaker:You can either book it directly through websites made simple co
Speaker:uk, or you can come and find me on LinkedIn where I'm Holly C Christie.
Speaker:I would love to hear from you and to hear what you are gonna
Speaker:implement or what gap you've found.
Speaker:That's not set quite right, but is now.
Speaker:You can contact me on LinkedIn at Holly C Christie.
Speaker:You can email me at hello@websitesmadesimple.co.uk or if you're a
Speaker:voice like me, go onto the websitesmadesimple.co.uk.
Speaker:Go to the podcast page and you'll see on the contact form there you
Speaker:can drop me a voice note and I look forward to hearing from you.
Speaker:And until next time, happy designing.