| |
> Get Articles > Web Site Design > Independent Consultants Take Over Web Design
Independent Consultants Take Over Web Design
Download as PDF
Chris Kalaboukis
chriskon-ware.com
SwapSmarts
http://www.swapsmarts.com
Whether you are a web designer, or have worked with web
design vendors, the web design business has changed greatly
over the last few years. While there has been great change
in this marketplace, there are a few main streams which are
developing, most of which are positive trends for the
independent web consultant.
Larger Fortune 500 firms now have handed most of the
responsibility for web work to their internal Information
Technology (IT) depts. While marketing continues to have a
say, IT will make most of the vendor decisions. This is a
shift which could be problematic for web design shops or
individual consultants if they have traditionally dealt
with marketing departments and maintained those
relationships. Marketing and IT departments have
traditionally been at odds within most companies. Many web
design firms may not have the technical breadth and depth
to be IT consultants; therefore they have never really built
strong ties with IT. Since they have not built these ties,
it becomes more difficult to gain business from IT
departments. However, many independent consultants who moved
into the web space do have an IT background, and therefore
they can easily make the transition to becoming a consultant
to an IT dept.
As the web moves beyond the brochureware stage for these
clients, as they provide more functionality; they are more
and more intertwined with their legacy systems. As they
become more connected to the business systems, the standard
bearer of business systems, IT, becomes more involved. As IT
becomes more involved, they will tend to turn to the
contractors they have been using: usually independent IT
consultants or larger consulting firms which they may already
have on board to do other IT consulting work.
The web is moving from medium to application. As it moves
from medium to application, the user experience becomes part
of an application, as opposed to the user experience being
the application. For example, when the web was young, the
web was more of a medium: similar to TV and radio, it was
not that interactive, and while there was some interactivity,
this interactivity was usually not interconnected to core
business practices. The look and feel, the interface, the
ultimate user experience was the goal to hit. In a few cases,
there was a defined task flow which the user could follow,
but in the early days, users were more expected to explore
than to be guided.
Now, as the web becomes more of an application, the look and
feel is not as important as being able to assist the user to
complete the task at hand, a skill which requires more than
adept graphic design (which does help but is not the whole
picture)
Ad-hoc interface standards have now emerged: it is no longer
necessary to come up with new interfaces and task flows every
time: standard web paradigms have emerged which can be and
should be reused in new designs. For example: a product company
website should have these standard navigation items: products,
support, customers, about us, contact us.
As budgets tighten, clients no longer see a vast difference
between larger web design shops such as Scient and Razorfish,
2-5 person firms, or even independent consultants, working from
their homes with very low overhead and able to provide similar
services at lower cost.
As big web shops have dissolved into breakaway smaller shops
with the same personnel, these breakaway shops have been able
to take and complete business the original shop could not
complete profitably. In some cases, independent consultants
can do the same work at a much lower cost by pulling together
an ad-hoc team of developers to work on a project by project
basis.
What we are seeing is the commoditization of the web design
experience.
The larger web design firms are seeing lot of competition
from small 2-5 person shops, or independent contractors,
working from their homes, with low overhead and/or off-shore
resources, being able to compete on price, and stealing
contracts from larger web design shops on that basis.
Large companies, facing budget cuts, are no longer interested
in dealing only with name brand firms: A Fortune 500 such as
Cisco is just as happy to deal with Brand X Design as they
are with Razorfish, because when you put the end-result
designs side-by-side, they can’t see the difference to
justify the cost. While there usually is small dissimilarity
in quality and usability, to the layperson, this difference
does not present itself as enough of a value-add for the
added cost.
Small firms or independent web consultants are taking over
the space the big boys used to play in and are doing it
profitably. The moral of this story is: don’t be afraid of
going for the bigger clients: in this marketplace, even
the bigger companies are looking to small firms and other
free agents: as long as you produce a professional design
and have the right skills: you can compete with the big
boys, and in this economy, win on price and still do great
work, both for your clients and for your portfolio.
How useful did you find this article?
This article can be downloaded freely from http://www.get-articles.com and used on your website or in your ezine so long as the author is credited and their resource box left intact. You should not change any links in the article, and where the article is used on a website it's links should be clickable. Please see our terms and conditions page for more information: http://www.get-articles.com/authors-publishers-terms.php
|
|