Ask HN: How to make a simple business website?
A plumber friend has asked me how to make a basic website for people to see on Google search results, which as a SWE of >10 years lands right in the middle of "Things it sounds like I should know" and "Things I don't know". I'm just not sure which DIY tool to recommend.
I can look into this, but figured you all would know best. What should we use?
Thanks!
16 comments
[ 1.8 ms ] story [ 32.8 ms ] threadI don't know it's worth spending your own time trying to create something custom or mess around with website builders because in the end it will cost a lot more than that $70 for a premium theme.
That said, it will be a few hours (2 or 3 maybe?) to set everything up.
But that's just my opinion.
More than anything get some decent hosting (i.e not EIG group/GoDaddy)
(If it's too much effort - more than happy to discuss further - website on profile)
Your plumber doesn't need a blog, just a business page. Wix excels at that. WordPress is terrible at it, even with a custom theme, because the underlying engine is designed around blogs.
[1] https://sites.google.com/
IMHO Google is the LAST company you'd want to trust with a simple small-business site. They will often release something and never update it again, and offer zero support for any issues you might run into.
If you can't even pay them for it, they have zero incentive to improve it.
Google sites is a great service, that started about 20 years ago. It won't get killed.
You'd probably want to choose the CMS or site builder if your plumber friend wants to actually maintain the site and add content though.
Just have him put it on Wix or Squarespace or Square business or such.
Don't mess with WordPress either. Not worth the complexity for a simple business page.
What these services do that Wordpress does NOT do is abstract away the whole stack and manage all of it for the user. Your plumber pays a tiny monthly fee ($10-$20) and all he ever has to worry about is look and feel, as in he chooses a theme, adds some text and images and contact info... and done. He'll never have to worry about hosting or updates or plug-ins or "post vs page" or hierarchies of nav menus or "invalidating a cache" or "updating the database" or any of the other low-level stuff that Wordpress still makes painfully obvious.
Nothing against Wordpress, it's a powerful FOSS solution and what gave me my start in web dev, it's just no longer the best tool for the job. I've migrated several clients from Wordpress to Wix and they are MUCH happier. Wordpress will inevitably incur maintenance costs a year or two after deployment, and they'll either have to ask you back to help or hire another dev then. Even hosted on Wordpress.com with a lot of the power features disabled, it's still way too low-level compared to the actual page builder services.