i was wondering what questions you would ask a client who is getting you to redesign their website

assume its a standard business web presence type of site (e.g. under $5k in budget)

the questions i have so far are:


  • how much of your existing site's content will you carry-over to the new website?

  • what are the main reasons for wanting a redesign? (e.g. out-dated look, new logo and branding, etc)

  • what shortcomings exist with the current site?

  • what do you think worked well with your existing website?

  • what aspects of your existing site do you want to carry-over to your new site?

  • in terms of visual design & layout, how much change do you want?

  • in terms of SEO, how has your current website performed?

  • is your logo staying the same?

  • in terms of the existing websites colour scheme, what do you want to do?

  • does the current website have a content management system?

  • if you could change three things about your current website right now, what would they be?

  • how much traffic is your current website receiving each week?


can anyone suggest any additional questions?

thanks

-LM

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3 Answers

You need to ask what the actual requirements are. If you are supposed to replicate the old website and do some additional things, what is your plan for discovering what the old website did? One option would be for them to tell you, another would be to read through all the code to try to figure it out, document what you find, then get them to sign off on that. The main thing is to make sure you have an agreed on list of requirements before you agree to a cost/schedule.

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Yeah... I'm assuming you're going to take the answers to your questions and work up business requirements of some sort. BTW, I would recommend use cases. And yes, the customer needs to sign of on the use cases.

That said, in reading your list of questions I find myself wondering how you intend to actually improve the features/functionality of the site. Your questions indicate a re-engineering of the existing site, but how will you find out what's missing? How will you find out if there are features no one's thought about yet? How will you find out what the users of the site think about it? How will you find out what existing features aren't being used?

Work out questions that will give you that kind of information.

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You need to know about the business's primary demographic - a web site targeting 18-25 year old men will require a totally different aesthetic from a site with a target demographic of elderly women. It will also inform your non-functional requirements - You will need to pay more attention to legacy browser compatibility for sites with a less tech savvy target audience and you will also have to pay more attention to accessibility concerns if your site is primarily for older users.

Some of the questions you are asking are perhaps not entirely appropriate:

Unless you are building a site for an SEO consultant, your customer is unlikely to know how well optimised it is for Search Engine performance. That's something you should be telling them.

Same with existing shortcomings - you're the web designer, you should be telling them where their website falls short.

I don't see how current traffic levels are going to affect your requirements (unless you're redesigning a really high traffic site).

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