Developing a website for a start-up

Aug 5, 2001
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I hope this is the right forum to post this; if not, somebody please tell me and I would post it in the appropriate forum and ask the mods to delete this post.

I am starting my own business in short order and am now in the process of thinking about the website, an area I have no experience in. My problem is I don't know anything about website development and current state of technology to be able to have an intelligent conversation with a prospective developer and the process of choosing one. Here are my constraints:

(1) I am shoe-string budget. however, that said, the website is very important part of my business and it has to be very professional. As such, I am not going to be penny wise and pound foolish; I do intend to hire a website designer/developer. I am willing to spend good amount of money but be prudent about it. Time is off essence too so no messing around with students who have not developed a website for a real businesses.
(2) There is no eCommerce on the site and it is mostly informational only with 5-8 pages. The website will have pictures and animation with special effects (nothing extreme). However, customers would have accounts to manage their subscription as well as a simple database application (e.g. when one clicks on the link, depending on the user account, an activity is initiated - this could be as simple as dialing an unique phone number using an application I have, listing users past interactions with date & time stamps, subscription resources subscribed to and those remaining, etc.).
(3) Once the website is developed, I need to be able to go and make simple informational changes to it on as need basis- e.g. update text and pictures. I am quite tech savvy so I would like to do this myself instead of paying someone every time I need to change something minor. Minor learning curve or learn-as-you-go is OK.
(4) I already have a scalable logo developed, a preliminary idea of pages I want, their layout/design and the content that should go on each page.

So those are the constraints. And here the questions (if some of these questions don't make sense, it is because of my ignorance, pardon me):

(1) There are so many platforms to use - proprietary (e.g. Sharepoint) versus open source e.g. PHP). Which one is preferable and why?

(2) Flash or HTML5? Actually, does it matter?

(4) Any thoughts on the database part of the website? Underlying platform? i should be able to add to user attributes, change/update the, etc. on as need basis.

(5) For me to maintain the website on ongoing basis, do I need something like Dreamweaver? Should I be seeking a web developer who uses this or an alternative proprietary software/

(6) What should I look for in the website designer/developer? What kind of due diligence?

(7) No racist/snarly comments please - is it worth outsourcing this project to guys in Eastern Europe/India to save some money (I am not worried about their knowledge of basic English as I would be supplying all the content). Plus I am culturally comfortable working with people from abroad. I am looking for creativity, professionalism and technical competence and these do not carry any particular country's flag!

(8) Anything else you can think of that I should considering? Please feel free to pepper me with questions!

TIA.
 
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aceO07

Diamond Member
Nov 6, 2000
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Is the website a service that your customer will pay for?

Or, is it just something extra to display/track information that might be useful for your customers or potential customers?
 
Aug 5, 2001
190
0
71
Is the website a service that your customer will pay for?

Or, is it just something extra to display/track information that might be useful for your customers or potential customers?

The second - to display/track information that might be useful for your customers or potential customers?
 

911paramedic

Diamond Member
Jan 7, 2002
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Its kind of hard to offer advice because I'm a little unclear on the whole idea. Is there anything over at http://php.opensourcecms.com/ that you can use as an example of what you are trying to do?

Personally, I don't care much for flash because it requires a plugin, and more and more people are accessing sites with pads that don't even support it. But that's just me.

My two cents is probably worth a little less in todays economy, but it's all I have.
 

911paramedic

Diamond Member
Jan 7, 2002
9,448
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By pointing you at that site, I meant that you may be able to say "something like this type of thing" and not necessarily a template that would solve your problems. (Although it has happened before.)
 

hooflung

Golden Member
Dec 31, 2004
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Sharepoint and PHP have little to do with eachother.

You should be asking yourself if you want a custom Ruby on Rails site, custom Code Igniter (php) site or if you should look into installing WordPress and trying to hunt down a company or individual that can build you a plugin that can do all the extra things you want outside of the CMS functionality you need. You can always buy a theme you like and incorporate you logo with WordPress.

Time and Money wise you should go with the latter. There are plenty of WordPress guru companies out there looking for work. Go to Sitepoint.com or Webhostingforums.com and hit the work-wanted sections.

As for outsourcing... no. Keep your money in your phone coverage area. Make sure you get a contract signed that is legally binding.
 

911paramedic

Diamond Member
Jan 7, 2002
9,448
1
76
Go to Sitepoint.com or Webhostingforums.com and hit the work-wanted sections.

As for outsourcing... no. Keep your money in your phone coverage area. Make sure you get a contract signed that is legally binding.

Great advice right there.
 

chusteczka

Diamond Member
Apr 12, 2006
3,399
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Programmers are often divided into two basic camps; (unix/linux/open source) and Microsoft. These various technologies are based off the webserver that will host the webpage. Whoever you go to will have a preference and they will form their solution for your needs based off their experience.

Please stay away from Flash. Beyond that, if you have no technical preference, find a developer or company and let them design a solution for your needs.

Take a look at WordPress. I have not worked with it but it may fit your needs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WordPress
http://wordpress.org/
 

Leros

Lifer
Jul 11, 2004
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The second - to display/track information that might be useful for your customers or potential customers?

Can you explain what you're doing more? I feel like you might be able to use/customize an existing solution which will be much much cheaper than having a custom solution built.