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A client came to me for a WordPress website.I quoted $600.He said:“That’s too expensive. I’ll find someone cheaper.” 🙂He...
22/05/2026

A client came to me for a WordPress website.
I quoted $600.
He said:
“That’s too expensive. I’ll find someone cheaper.” 🙂
He did.
$150. Done in a few days.
He even sent me the website link after it went live… probably to prove a point.
So I opened it.
Slow loading.
Free template with his logo placed on top.
No strategy. No structure. No user flow.
It looked like a website…
but it didn’t work like one. 😬
A few weeks later, he messaged me again.
“Visitors are coming, but nobody is contacting us.”
“The design doesn’t feel professional.”
“The website is slow and people are leaving.”
He asked if I could fix it.
I told him honestly:
“This isn’t a fix job.
This needs to be rebuilt properly from scratch.”
My quote?
$600.
Same price. Same developer. 😄
This time, no negotiation.
We rebuilt everything:
✔ Fast loading speed
✔ Clean modern design
✔ Mobile responsive layout
✔ Clear call-to-actions
✔ Better user experience
✔ SEO-friendly structure
A website designed to turn visitors into actual clients.
And finally…
he got what he needed from day one.
But here’s what the “cheap” website actually cost him:
$150 + $600 = $750
Plus lost time.
Lost visitors.
Lost trust.
And a weak first impression for his business.
Cheap isn’t always affordable.
And quality isn’t expensive when it brings results. 💡
Have you ever seen a client go cheap first and regret it later?

Biz IT Solutions (Prime Biz)
22/05/2026

Biz IT Solutions
(Prime Biz)










Prime Biz (Business IT Solutions)
21/05/2026

Prime Biz (Business IT Solutions)










Clients ask me all the time: "Should I use WordPress, Wix, Shopify, or Webflow?"Here is my honest answer, with no agenda...
20/05/2026

Clients ask me all the time: "Should I use WordPress, Wix, Shopify, or Webflow?"
Here is my honest answer, with no agenda.
🔵 WordPress
Best for: businesses that want full control and long-term flexibility.
You own your data. No monthly platform fee eating into your margins. 59,000+ plugins. Scales from a 3-page site to a full ecommerce store without switching platforms.
Downside: needs a developer to set up properly.
🟡 Wix
Best for: absolute beginners who need something live in a weekend.
Easy drag and drop. But you are locked into their ecosystem. Limited SEO control. When you outgrow it, you rebuild from scratch, not migrate.
Downside: you will hit a ceiling faster than you think.
🟢 Shopify
Best for: pure ecommerce with simple product catalogues.
Reliable, fast, and great for selling products. But every feature costs extra. Transaction fees add up. And it is not built for content-heavy sites.
Downside: expensive at scale, limited outside of ecommerce.
🟣 Webflow
Best for: designers who want pixel-perfect control without a developer.
Beautiful output. Great SEO. But the learning curve is steep and the monthly cost climbs fast with a team.
Downside: not ideal for non-technical clients managing their own content.
My take after building 50+ websites:
If you want to own your platform, scale without limits, and not pay a SaaS company forever, WordPress wins.
But the right platform depends on your goals, budget, and team.
Which platform are you currently using and are you happy with it?

The website looked fine ✅But the business wasn't growing ❌ Here's what I changed.A client came to me with a website that...
12/05/2026

The website looked fine ✅But the business wasn't growing ❌
Here's what I changed.

A client came to me with a website that "looked fine"

But something wasn't working.

Visitors were landing. Nobody was converting.

Before touching a single design element, I asked:

"What do you want someone to do the moment they land here?"

The answer was clear. The website wasn't.

Here's what we fixed: ✅

→ Rewrote the hero headline (old one described the business, new one spoke to the customer)
→ Moved the CTA from the bottom to above the fold
→ Cut 60% of the homepage content (less noise, more focus)
→ Optimized page speed (was loading in 5.8s, now under 2s)
→ Made mobile layout match the desktop intent

The result?

The website now does its job.

Not flashy. Not overdesigned.

Just clear, fast, and focused.

If your website looks fine but isn't performing, the problem usually isn't the design. It's the direction.

DM me if you want an honest look at yours. 📩

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