There’s a time when every company says: 

“Our website is outdated.” 
“We need a redesign.” 
“It doesn’t reflect who we are anymore.” 

And the project starts. 
New design. New pages. New look. 

Then, a few months later, the uncomfortable truth dawns: 

Nothing really changed. 

Traffic, leads, and sales might be similar. 
The website looks better. 
But the business performance didn’t budge. 

At ACT360, this is a daily experience. Not because companies don’t know what they’re doing, but because they attempt to address a business performance issue with something visual. 

“Most website redesigns fail not because of execution, but because they’re solving the wrong problem,” says Adam Bowles, Director of Web Services at ACT360. 

The Big Misunderstanding About Redesigns 

Most redesign projects start with: 

• The site looks old 
• The brand has evolved 
• The competition appears more modern 
• Marketing wants something fresh 

All valid reasons. 
But none of them are performance motivations. 

A redesign is a change to the website’s aesthetics. 

It does not automatically change: 

• How leads are qualified 
• How decisions are made 
• How information flows 
• How sales work 
• How operations are supported 

If the site was not functioning as a system before, a redesign will just cause it to fail at higher resolution. 

What We See in Real Organizations 

When companies come to us after having their site redesigned, they usually tell us: 

• “We thought this would improve conversions.” 
• “We expected better leads.” 
• “We assumed performance would go up.” 

But in reality: 

• The same friction exists 
• The same bottlenecks exist 
• The same manual work exists 
• The same confusion exists 
• There’s that same divide between marketing, sales, and operations 

The website changed. 
The business system behind it did not. 

A Better Website Is Not the Same as a Better System 

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: 

Most websites don’t underperform because they look bad. 
They underperform because: 

• They are not process-aligned 
• They have no ties to sales and operations 
• They are insufficiently filtered or qualified 
• They don’t decrease internal labor 
• They don’t guide decisions 
• They don’t remove friction 

A redesign that doesn’t alter these things is a cosmetic improvement. 

It may help perception. 
It rarely helps performance. 

Why Redesigns Often Make Things Worse 

In many cases, redesigns actually: 

• Reset SEO and performance 
• Break existing workflows 
• Introduce new complexity 
• Slow down updates 
• Create new dependencies 
• Take out things that were quietly working 

All without addressing the same underlying issues. 

It’s why some companies actually experience a dip following a redesign, and for many, never see significant gains. 

When a Redesign Actually Does Make Sense 

A redesign is successful when it isn’t really a redesign. 

It works when: 

• The business has changed 
• The offering has changed 
• Selling has changed 
• The operations have changed 
• The role of the website has evolved 

And the website is being re-architected as a system, not merely repainted as a surface. 

That means redesigning: 

• How leads flow 
• How requests are handled 
• How information is structured 
• How decisions are supported 
• How internal teams are using the site 
• Where the site fits in operations 

That is a business project, not a design project. 

The Hidden Cost of “Looks Better” 

The true cost of a failed redesign appears as: 

• 3-5 more years of the same old stuff 
• Spending more money on traffic to fix conversion instead 
• More grunt work for sales and operations 
• More internal frustration 
• More workarounds 
• More missed opportunities 

The retooling winds up as a squandered opportunity to reset it. 

The Right Question to Ask Before Any Redesign 

The wrong question is: 

“What should the new site look like?” 

The right questions are: 

• “What should the website do for the business?” 
• “What problems should it remove?” 
• “What should it make easier, faster, or more reliable?” 
• “What role should it play in our growth?” 

Until those questions are addressed, no redesign will lead to better outcomes. 

How ACT360 Approaches Website Projects 

ACT360 is not introduced through layouts and themes. 

We start by understanding: 

• How you’re really making money 
• How sales happen 
• How leads should be handled 
• Where friction exists 
• Where on the website, work should be supported 

Sometimes the answer is: 

• “Let’s fix up and optimize what you already have.” 

Sometimes the answer is: 

• “This needs more of a retrofit than a reboot.” 

Which is exactly why we help people to think of websites as business systems in our Web Development practice

The Real Question to Ask 

The real question is not: 

“Do we need a new website?” 

It is: 

“Is our website helping the business perform better?” 

If the answer is “not really,” then the issue is not design. 

It’s architecture. 

Final Thought 

A fresh website coat doesn’t change the way a business conducts itself. 

Better systems do. 

So, if your last redesign didn’t make a difference, it’s not because websites don’t matter. 
It’s because you tried to fix a business system with a design project. 

If you’d rather have your next website project make an impact on results for a change, ACT360 can help guide you through it with a business-first, performance-based approach. 

T: 705-739-2281 
E: [email protected] 

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