What a Performance Review Should Check Before a Redesign
A redesign should not begin before the team understands how the current site performs, where friction actually lives, and which problems are technical, structural, or conversion-related.
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Articles from Best Website focused on web design. You’re viewing page 7 of 23.
A redesign should not begin before the team understands how the current site performs, where friction actually lives, and which problems are technical, structural, or conversion-related.
Content can attract the right readers and still fail commercially when the service pages it supports do not make scope, fit, or boundaries easy to understand. Strong articles cannot compensate for unclear offers forever.
A website can answer questions well and still stall readers before contact. When there is no clear next step between learning and reaching out, the site often creates hesitation at exactly the wrong moment.
Image optimization improves more than file size. It helps pages load more calmly, reduces unnecessary transfer weight, and supports a cleaner user experience across devices.
A service page can describe deliverables accurately and still leave the reader uncertain about why the work matters. When the page explains activity better than outcome, it usually weakens both trust and conversion intent.
Cleaner design language can improve readability, but it becomes costly when it removes the specifics that helped buyers trust the page. Review what the proof is doing before you polish it into abstraction.
More content can increase reach, but it does not automatically resolve hesitation on the pages where decisions are made. If core pages still leave buyers unsure, publishing volume alone will not repair the problem.
Service-page cleanup should remove friction, not remove the information that helps qualified buyers trust the page and move forward.
An accessibility fix can look complete on the page being reviewed while the same issue remains embedded in shared components across the site. Review the component source, not just the visible page, before calling the work done.
A resource center can expand topical coverage, but it should not outrun the core service pages that need to convert attention into action. Compare educational ambition with commercial readiness before you launch a larger content hub.