A website is often the first point of contact between a business and its potential customers. Yet too many organizations jump straight into design and development without proper planning, leading to costly revisions, missed objectives, and websites that fail to deliver results.
This comprehensive guide covers the complete planning process, from discovery and requirements gathering through strategic foundation-setting and technology selection. Whether you're building your first website or redesigning an existing one, these principles will help you avoid common pitfalls and create a website that truly works for your business.
80.8%
Businesses redesign websites because they fail to convert
400%
ROI from investing in UX design
7 Phases
Of effective website development
Why Website Planning Matters
Website planning matters because a website is a strategic business asset, not merely a design exercise. Every element of your website should serve a specific purpose in moving visitors toward desired actions.
The Cost of Skipping Planning:
Poor planning manifests in multiple ways during and after a website project. Scope creep becomes rampant when requirements aren't clearly defined upfront, leading to budget overruns and extended timelines. Teams find themselves redesigning elements repeatedly because no one agreed on the underlying strategy.
Common Planning Mistakes to Avoid
- Treating the website as internal project rather than a customer-facing tool
- Treating planning as a single meeting rather than an ongoing process
- Setting vague objectives that provide no actionable guidance
- Focusing on what to say rather than what customers need to hear
Planning also aligns stakeholders and team members around a shared vision. When everyone understands the website's objectives, target audience, and success metrics, decisions become easier and more consistent.
The Discovery Phase
The discovery phase is the foundation of effective website planning. This preliminary phase involves researching the problem space, understanding your business objectives, and gathering enough evidence to make informed decisions.
Discovery Activities Include:
- Stakeholder interviews to uncover business goals and requirements
- Competitive analysis to identify industry standards and opportunities
- Technical audits of existing platforms and systems
- User research to understand target audience needs
Stakeholder Identification
Identifying the right stakeholders is crucial. The first step is consolidating a list of key participants who will contribute to requirement gathering:
- Product owners with direct knowledge of products or services
- Technical leads understanding existing platforms and integrations
- Decision makers with authority to approve budgets and scope
- Customer-facing teams with operational experience and customer insights
Research Techniques
Kick-off meetings establish mutual understanding among all parties involved, ensuring everyone shares a common vision before diving into detailed requirements.
Workshops provide interactive sessions where stakeholders collaborate on requirements using techniques like user stories--"As a [user], I need to [achieve something]".
Prototyping during discovery helps stakeholders visualize possibilities they couldn't otherwise articulate, sparking discussion and uncovering requirements.
For deeper insights into discovery methodologies, explore our UX design services to understand how research translates into user-centered experiences.
Setting Strategic Foundations
With discovery complete, the next phase translates research into strategic foundations for your website.
Defining Your Target Audience
Understanding your target audience goes beyond basic demographics to encompass motivations, behaviors, and decision-making processes:
- What problems are they trying to solve?
- What alternatives are they considering?
- What would make them choose you over competitors?
Creating detailed user personas helps teams maintain audience focus throughout the project. These composite characters represent your key audience segments, complete with goals, challenges, and typical online behaviors.
Establishing Success Metrics
Success metrics translate business goals into measurable indicators:
- Conversion rates for key actions
- Lead quality scores and customer acquisition metrics
- Engagement metrics including time on site and pages per session
- Revenue attributed to web channels
Baseline measurements taken before redesign provide comparison points for evaluating improvement.
Learn more about measuring success through our digital analytics services to ensure your website delivers measurable business value.
Discovery Report
Comprehensive analysis of business goals, audience insights, and competitive landscape
Content Strategy
Content mapping and information architecture for all audience segments and journey stages
Technical Requirements
Platform specifications, integration needs, and scalability requirements
Design Direction
Visual guidelines, UX principles, and brand alignment standards
Project Plan
Timeline, milestones, resource allocation, and risk mitigation strategies
Success Metrics
Baseline measurements and KPIs for evaluating website performance
Content Strategy and Information Architecture
Content strategy determines what information your website will present and how it will be organized.
Planning Your Site Structure
Site structure should mirror the mental models your target audience brings to your website:
- Hierarchical structures for distinct service or product categories
- Cross-linking for visitors with questions spanning multiple categories
- Navigation that accommodates both browsers and searchers
Content prioritization determines what gets prominent placement versus what lives deeper in the site. The most important content should be immediately accessible.
User Journey Mapping
User journey mapping visualizes the path visitors take from initial awareness through final conversion:
- Awareness stage: Educational content and brand introduction
- Consideration stage: Solution details and differentiation
- Decision stage: Specific calls to action and conversion elements
Mapping reveals potential friction points where visitors might abandon the journey, allowing proactive design solutions.
Our content marketing services can help develop the strategic content your audience needs at every stage of their journey.
Technology Selection
Technology selection determines the platform, tools, and technical infrastructure that will power your website.
Platform Options
Traditional CMS (WordPress, Drupal, Joomla): All-in-one solutions with built-in content editing, templates, and extensibility. Ideal for content-heavy websites where non-technical staff need to manage pages.
Headless CMS: Separates content repository from presentation layer, delivering content via API. Maximum flexibility for organizations with complex requirements or multiple channels.
Static Site Generators: Pre-render HTML for lightning-fast performance. Work well when content changes infrequently and performance is paramount.
Integration and Scalability
Your website connects with CRM systems, marketing automation, analytics, and other business systems. Planning should identify all required integrations:
- CRM integration for lead management
- Marketing automation for nurturing campaigns
- Analytics for performance tracking
- Payment processing for e-commerce
Security requirements continue to intensify, particularly for websites handling personal data. Consider compliance needs and ongoing maintenance requirements.
Discover our full range of technology services to find the right platform for your business needs.
| Platform Type | Best For | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional CMS | Content-heavy sites, non-technical editors | All-in-one solution, easy editing, large ecosystem | Performance limitations, maintenance overhead |
| Headless CMS | Multi-channel delivery, complex requirements | Maximum flexibility, future-proof architecture | Higher technical complexity |
| Static Sites | Performance-critical sites, infrequent updates | Blazing fast, excellent security, simple hosting | Limited dynamic functionality |
Design Foundations and Brand Alignment
Design foundations translate your strategic foundations into visual and experiential direction.
Visual Design Direction
Visual design direction establishes the look and feel that will differentiate your website:
- Color specifications aligned with brand identity
- Typography choices for readability and brand expression
- Imagery style guidelines for consistent visual language
- Responsive design standards for cross-device consistency
Competitive differentiation requires understanding how competitors present themselves visually, then identifying opportunities to stand out while remaining appropriate for your industry.
User Experience Guidelines
User experience guidelines establish patterns and standards for how visitors interact:
- Navigation conventions and information hierarchy
- Form design standards and user input patterns
- Interaction patterns for common actions
- Accessibility requirements (WCAG compliance)
Conversion optimization principles guide the design of elements intended to drive visitor action--button placement, trust signals, and the psychology of conversion.
Learn how our branding services ensure your visual identity aligns with your strategic goals.
Project Planning and Timeline
With strategic, content, technology, and design foundations established, the final planning phase creates an actionable project plan.
Milestone Definition
Milestones break the project into manageable phases with clear completion criteria:
- Discovery Completion - Research documented, requirements approved
- Design Concept Approval - Visual direction and UX patterns finalized
- Development Completion - All functionality implemented and tested
- Content Integration - All content loaded and optimized
- Testing Sign-off - QA complete, bugs resolved
- Launch - Website deployed and live
Resource Allocation
Resource allocation ensures the right people are available at the right times:
- Internal team members and their responsibilities
- External agencies or contractors
- Stakeholder time for reviews and approvals
- Ongoing maintenance resources post-launch
Risk identification prepares for challenges that may arise:
- Technical obstacles and mitigation strategies
- Stakeholder availability constraints
- Content development timeline risks
- Scope change management approach
Ready to move forward? Our project management approach ensures your website planning translates into successful execution.