Should you build your own website?
It depends on who you are and where the business is going. There is no universal answer, only the path that fits the situation.
DIY when the stakes are low and you are testing an idea. Template, two weeks, your own hands. You end up with a foundation that holds, but work drifts over time. Pages stop speaking the same language. Updates compound inconsistency. Strategy and messaging stay untouched.
An independent designer when the business is growing and you want one senior set of hands across strategy, design and build. Direct conversations. End-to-end ownership. The people you meet are the people doing the work. This is usually the right call for growing businesses that want to consolidate their brand into one long-term direction.
An agency when the scope is genuinely multi-team: many markets, regulated industries, parallel workstreams. Specialists on a bench, programme management as a layer, budgets to match.
The expensive mistake is picking the wrong model for the situation. DIY when revenue is on the line. An agency for a small site. An independent designer for a project better suited to an agency, where multiple stakeholders expect to weigh in on decisions and layers of programme management are part of how the work moves. Independent practitioners take ownership of the whole pipeline, and the communication approach reflects that. A mismatch costs more than a style mistake. It costs the months you spend before anyone notices, and the work it takes to correct.
Three questions help:
1️⃣ Do you really need to be doing this yourself, or is your energy better spent on the work only you can do?
2️⃣ What does the site actually have to do?
3️⃣Whose time are you trading, yours or money to protect yours?
If you are a growing business looking to consolidate your brand into one holistic, long-term direction, an independent designer is usually the right call. Reach out and we can scope your project together.