Digital cowboys can unintentionally hurt their own websites by making changes without first consulting the professionals they’ve hired. This article explores this topic.
The Sage Digital Agency podcast, where Alex and guests discuss topics surrounding website design, WordPress hosting, and many tangentially related topics.
Digital cowboys can unintentionally hurt their own websites by making changes without first consulting the professionals they’ve hired. This article explores this topic.
Business growth gets messy when the owner stays in every decision. This piece breaks down the hiring, systems, review workflows, and operating habits that help a business grow without losing quality.
What turns a company’s mission into something people actually trust? This piece explores the gap between having an “on-paper why” and a brand belief that is lived daily through clear values, internal advocacy, consistent branding, and strong client relationships.
A real client explains what separates a true digital agency partner from a vendor. Trust, responsiveness, accountability, and problem-solving matter more than promises. When agencies answer the phone, take responsibility, and act in the client’s best interest, results follow, and relationships last.
Getting ghosted by a web developer can shut down your business overnight. If you do not own your domain, have admin access to your website, and know where your site is hosted, you are at risk.
What Working with the Right Digital Agency Actually Looks Like: A Private Jet Brokerage’s Story Denise Wilson spent two months in weekly two-hour Zoom calls that went nowhere.
The web design space is a wild west. Completely unregulated. No licensing requirements. No certifications that mean anything. You can call yourself a web designer with nothing more than a laptop and an internet connection. That’s it…and that’s the problem.
Building a new website feels like a leap of faith. You know the current site isn’t working. Competitors are passing you by. But how do you justify spending $10,000, $20,000, or more on a project that might take months to complete?