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By Site Web 24/7 Team

Web design process: complete method for a converting site

Web design isn't just about graphics. Here's the complete method: brief, wireframes, mockup, prototype, delivery.

Design UX Process

Web design follows a precise method. Skipping a step produces a pretty but non-converting site, or vice versa. This guide details the 6 design stages, what happens at each, who validates them, and the traps to avoid at every phase.

The 6 stages of web design

  1. Brief and strategy: who, what, for whom, measurable goals.
  2. Information architecture: sitemap, pages, navigation.
  3. Wireframes: page structure in grayscale (no design).
  4. Graphic mockup: final design applied.
  5. Interactive prototype: clickable navigation before development.
  6. Development, testing, launch.

Step 1: Strategic brief

This is the most neglected and most decisive step. Answers to formalize:

  • What's the #1 goal of the site? (generate leads, sell online, inform).
  • Who is the target visitor? (persona with needs, frictions, jargon).
  • Who are the direct competitors? How do you differentiate?
  • Which indicators will measure success? (forms/month, sales, traffic).
  • What's the total budget (creation + recurring + marketing)?

Without these answers, the designer works blind. Count 1–3 hours of brief meeting with a good provider.

Step 2: Information architecture

List of pages, hierarchy, primary and secondary navigation. Output: a visual sitemap (tree) showing all pages and their links. For a standard SMB: 7–12 pages. Beyond 20, you dilute the message.

  • Define main navigation (5–7 entries max).
  • Choose between vertical vs horizontal view (mobile-first dictates).
  • Think about the footer (often forgotten but visited by 30% of users).
  • Define breadcrumb if needed.

Step 3: Wireframes

Grayscale mockups, without final colors or definitive images. The goal: validate the structure (where the title is, where the CTA is, how info is organized) without being distracted by aesthetics.

  • Wireframes for 3–5 key pages minimum (home, service, contact).
  • Tools used: Figma, Sketch, Adobe XD.
  • Client validation at this stage avoids 80% of back-and-forth in the design phase.

Step 4: Graphic mockup

Final design applied: colors, fonts, photos, illustrations, animations. Output: static mockups for each page type.

  • Coherent style guide (palette, fonts, spacing, button style).
  • Tests on 3 screen sizes (mobile, tablet, desktop) minimum.
  • 2–3 rounds of revision are healthy. Beyond that, signal of poorly scoped brief.

Step 5: Interactive prototype

Often skipped — that's a mistake. The prototype lets you click elements as in a real site, without yet having coded. Detects flow problems before development (costly to fix later).

Step 6: Development, testing, launch

  • HTML/CSS/JS development or WordPress/Shopify integration depending on platform.
  • Tests: speed, mobile, forms, accessibility, basic SEO.
  • Migration from old site with 301 redirects to preserve SEO.
  • Progressive launch (sometimes in "hidden" mode for 48h testing).

Common mistakes at each stage

  1. Sloppy brief: "we'll see along the way" = guaranteed disaster.
  2. Skipped wireframes: go straight to design, then redo everything.
  3. Too many pages from the start — better to launch 7 excellent pages than 20 mediocre ones.
  4. No validation at each stage — huge costs in late correction.
  5. Launch without real tests on 3 browsers and 3 screen sizes.

What does web design cost?

  • Small site (5 pages): $1,500–$3,000 design included.
  • Medium site (10–15 pages): $3,000–$6,000.
  • Large site (e-commerce, custom): $6,000–$15,000 and up.

The design phase (brief + wireframes + mockup) typically represents 30–40% of the total project budget.

Related

Frequently asked questions

How long does the design phase take?

2–4 weeks for a standard site, from brief to validated mockup. More if many back-and-forths or unclear brief at start.

Can you skip the wireframes phase?

Technically yes, but not recommended. Skipping wireframes = 30–50% more back-and-forth in the design phase. It's longer and more expensive overall.

How many pages should be mocked up?

5–8 key pages (home, typical service, contact, about, article page, cart if e-commerce, legal). Other pages draw from the created templates.

Does the designer also develop?

Not necessarily. Often designer ≠ developer. A good agency separates the two roles. A freelancer can do both but rarely as well on both sides.

Starting a project? Request a design quote — brief + wireframes + mockup delivered in 3 weeks.

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