I’m just getting my first website going, and I think it’s hit a solid version 0.9. The content is in there, I like the color and feel (mostly), the forms work, and Google ads can track things.
It needs some more love to polish the look, maybe break out some pages, and one more pass on the wording.
Would this be a polite or socially acceptable location to invite one of you fine sparkle professionals to help me tune it up? Paid, of course.
And you are very correct, I had the CloudFront security settings only allowing US and Canada, to which I have now added most of Europe and you Down Under folks.
Not bad for your first Sitely website, including mobile!
I agree with you regarding you might need to fill your site out with a few more pages. Although a one page website is great, it doesn’t give you great SEO tracking. Also please check your main navigation for Join Our Team & Contact - they are going to the same page.
Well as a non-web person, just viewing it, it looks way more impressive than what I’ve done, but saying that, one massively long page loses my attention. I literally lose focus on the content. Maybe if the information was accessed as several pages, then someone who is looking for some trigger term to keep their interest going might find that quicker. I wonder if you might miss some people that might otherwise be interested if they stop reading too soon.
The “Chat on LinkedIn” button produces dark screen with no chatting and the LinkedIn page for TeamCraft is “TeamCrafts” with an ‘s’ and out of India. The site notes Denver as home base.
Bad links? Over-exuberance? AI hallucination? or…?
Anyway… Happy New Year to all on a Western Calendar
Welcome to the community Byron. This from one of those tech development dudes you hire and put to good use…
Words… so many words. While your page (s ?) seems structurally clean (though un-proofread), the only picture seems to be a friendly guy with nice teeth. As a developer, I’m not sure, besides head-hunting, how this site should affect me - there’s nothing warm and fuzzy, or even notably discerning, about me - the prospective client. The recruiting page is even chillier, and really should have its own page or URL, lest it be interpreted by a consulting prospect as being a plea for engineers to fulfill the prospect’s own upcoming (should they hire you) staffing requirements.
Keeping with this forum’s own collegial temperament however, which never charges for brutal assessment of all of our works, you’re in the right place, and you’ve made good progress with Sitely, have nicely grokked the desktop-to-mobile design paradigm, and are well on your way. Thanks for showing it to us, and understanding my criticism. We’re taking over the world here - one web site at a time. Welcome aboard. More pictures!
This is good feedback. I’ve been working on the single page for so long it’s all I know and I’ve lost perspective on how it feels for someone seeing it for the first time.
I agree that the content is shoveled in there, and not super refined. You missed the key differential that I’m selling, which tells me that I need to highlight it more and get it un-buried from the shoveled content.
As everyone said, the website is packed with information regarding various services provided. But while it’s important to inform potential clients about the breadth of services, too much information on a single page can overwhelm visitors. I for sure got overwhelm a little bit
I would crunch everything down into pages, or even to modernize it more, I would invest in making a talking head video of yourself explaining about what you/the company do at the hero section, and down further on the website a CTA button and texts to support your video script.
Video is the peak of the moment, it would help costumers to visualize your business AND yourself and it will make everything more palatable with less scrolling. But thats my opinion, of course.