When initially budgeting and planning for a new website design project, the upfront build cost and timeline is often the primary consideration. However, the ongoing maintenance needs and expenses required after the site officially launches also play a hidden but critical role in total lifetime costs.
 
To keep your website optimized, relevant and performing well over the long run, it is prudent to proactively factor long-term maintenance fees into the web design plans upfront when engaging a web designer.
 
Regular Content Updates
Keeping website content fresh, engaging and relevant through ongoing additions and updating is crucial for maintaining visitor interest. Realistically estimate costs of creating new blog posts, articles, product pages, service descriptions etc. that will be required periodically after launch. Factor any content production or freelance writing fees that may arise over time from the web design agency or third party providers.
 
Visual Asset Refreshing
As a brand evolves, visual refresh needs for logos, photography, videos, graphics and more will inevitably come up. Account for potential creative fees from your web design agency or external visual content providers down the road. Outdated assets can make a big impact on perception.
 
Functionality Expansion
After launch, additional website features, integrations, personalization capabilities, animations etc. may be desired to boost engagement and conversions. Having the web design agency implement these will require dedicating new development time. Related costs should be accommodated in long-term website budgets and plans.
 
Payment for Hosting
Web hosting fees covering domain registration, hosting space, bandwidth, statistics etc. are often an annual recurring cost. Be sure to budget for this vital ongoing operational expenditure from third-party providers that keeps your website online and accessible.
 
Site Speed Optimizations
As websites grow in size, page speed can slow down due to images, videos and extra scripts. Plan for periodic technical audits and optimization tasks the web design agency’s developers may need to perform over time to maintain fast performance.
 
Platform and Security Upgrades
The core content management systems, ecommerce platforms and plugins powering your website will require upgrading to newer versions over time for feature expansions and better security coverage. Be sure to budget for any related update costs down the line.
 
Ongoing Support
Consider applicable monthly retainer fees for your web designer to provide post-launch support for issues that crop up, implementing requested changes and modifications, publishing content updates etc. Time-based support costs add up.
 
Internal Team Training
If your internal marketing team will be fully maintaining the website post-launch, hands-on training workshops provided by the web designer to transfer website management skills and knowledge can be hugely beneficial. Costs for this should be accounted for.
 
Seasonal Redesigns
For businesses with busy seasons, events or holiday spikes, booking your web designer well in advance to revamp the site with special promotions and seasonal designs during those high-traffic periods can maximize engagement and ROI.
 
While launching a new website often represents the largest upfront investment, allocating budget for the inevitable ongoing maintenance, support and enhancement needs enables keeping it optimized over the long run. An experienced website designer partner can help organizations realistically estimate budgets and plan financially for post-launch website costs.