80 Things to Check Before, During, and After Launching a Website
By shannakurpe@gmail.com (Shanna Kurpe)
Admit it: Launching a new website is stressful — even for the most seasoned digital marketers.
Websites are complex. There are so many things that are easily overlooked, like a broken link or a misspelled word.
And of course, a handful of things could go very, very wrong. Like what if you forget to test an important data capture form and then lose out on generating a bunch of new leads? Or worse, what if you forget to properly set up site redirects, and those valuable search engine visitors get a page not found message?
Instead of worrying about the what ifs, wouldn’t it be much easier to have a comprehensive website checklist to run down before every site launch? One that you could use for enterprise websites, microsites, landing pages, and everything in between?
Fortunately, we’ve created just that. Keep reading to learn everything you need to do before, during, and after launching a website.
What You Should Do Before Beginning Your Site Design
Whether this is your first website that is being built from scratch or you are doing a website redesign, there are a few steps that you should take before hiring a web designer or diving in yourself.
1. Analyze your previous website (if applicable).
In order to make good decisions, you must first understand where you’ve been. That starts with your existing website if you have one. Ask yourself:
- What is the purpose of a new design or overhaul?
- What haven’t hasn’t been accomplished with this existing site?
- How will a new design serve the new organization?
The answers to these questions can help you identify your gaps, which can then inform goal setting for the new site.
2. Crawl your old site (if applicable) and document its structure.
You can get an idea of your site’s existing structure, pages, and assets by using a crawling tool such as Screaming Frog. This is a necessary step in creating your website development plan because you’ll have a more concrete view of what pages existed before, what redirects are in place, and what the meta data currently looks like.
3. Obtain benchmark data from your previous website (if applicable), and confirm testing procedures.
Not only will you want to compare how your new site performs compared to the old, but you’ll also want to continue identifying gaps that will provide data-driven insights to aid your new strategy.
Additionally, you’ll want to confirm testing procedures. Soon, you’ll begin testing your website to make sure all the different components are working, everything flows, and there’s a system for tracking bugs and enhancements.
Use a form (like Google Forms) instead of asking people to email their thoughts so the feedback-gathering process is more streamlined. Then, put one person in charge of choosing which bugs to prioritize, and filtering all the creative feedback you receive through the form.
4. Identify your goals for the new design, how you’ll …read more
Source:: HubSpot Blog