Designing for your worst client: yourself

“Client sites are children you give to adoptive parents to raise. When it’s your own site, you have only yourself to take the credit or the blame for how things work out. You have the luxury to find and fix and agonize and obsess, but it’s also hard to know when to stop. I knew I’d achieved my personal goal for the redesign when another designer said that it didn’t feel like a complete departure from my old design, but a natural maturation and evolution.”

from Redesigning Your Own Site by Lea Alcantara August 04, 2009

One of the scariest and yet most vital things to do as a freelance web designer/developer is take on yourself as a client.

I’ve managed to do a fairly good job keeping my primary professional website current, trendy, and accurate. Every five years or so I’ve updated rainofhearts.com, confidently presenting my business Rainofhearts Web Design. I improved the overall look, colors, typography, navigation, compatibility, functionality. My brand and logo evolved. I added more mobile-first and mobile-friendly elements. I incorporated my social media presence, built a blog, and rewrote copy to be more clear and more inviting to potential clients and repeat clients. My website design services felt appropriately showcased in the best advertisement of all: my own website.

But I have more than one website! I’ve been designing and building since 1999. In 2000 I created not one, but two fan sites for genre television series. They both mean a lot to me (and their visitors) and yet I’d never put them through the same design or content scrutiny as my professional site. That had to change.

And now it has. From August 2019 to May 2020, I hired myself to fix my fan sites and make myself fall in love with them again. Being my own client definitely came with challenges, but also with a certain joy. I scoured design template ideas, evaluated color and type (font) themes. I analyzed the organization and content of the sites, planning to decimate some areas and expand others. I fixed deep-rooted design and layout problems and refined details with an eye of twenty more years of experience. Yet did these new ideas seem fresh while remaining true to their original purpose? Did they strengthen my professional credibility? At all stages, I had to pause and remind myself that this was a labor of pure love AND an advertisement for my services.

My Methos Pages Highlander fan site BEFORE the redesign. built in 2000.
Then: menu only on homepage (herk!) – Now: responsive, collapsing menu floats on every page.

Developing for myself, there are less voices and less feedback competing in the process. There is self-doubt in the decisions along with a pleasant streamlining in decisions. I did seek an outside perspective from trusted friends to see how I was doing.

My Queen of Swords fan site BEFORE the redesign. Built in 2000.
Then: frames (herk!) plus all the photos had been pushed down below the fold! – Now: concise, organized content on aptly named pages.

Finally the site redesigns were finished, I loved them, and still I realized I was hesitant to re-launch them. Doing so would mean retiring those old designs: tired, cumbersome, but familiar. So I didn’t make a launch schedule at all. I uploaded them like ripping off a band-aid. I debugged the live aspects of the sites on the fly, finding little things here and there I could have fixed earlier, but now with necessary urgency. Now I’m writing a blog post about the experience. Next, I’ll compose a fast notice for my socials about the projects. The world – or at least my social, fandom, and professional circles – will be aware of my beloved genre television fan sites, preserved and retooled, prepared to endure the next five (or up to twenty? LOL) years online.

My Methos Pages fan site, 2020 redesign
MASSIVE re-design and development of Rain’s Methos Pages. http://www.rainofhearts.com/methos/
A new, clean, reorganized website look, fully responsive on mobile devices, and the pages are easy to navigate using a wide range of web browsers and portable devices. I’ve re-instituted the Highlander 4: Endgame page(s); released two new Fan Fic stories; upgraded most of my Screen Captures with higher quality digital sources; added Legal Streaming and Retail Purchase options for much of Peter Wingfield’s work.
My Queen of Swords fan site, 2020 redesign
Rain’s The Dr Is In: Queen of Swords Fan Page has also received a MASSIVE re-design and development! I decided not to re-institute the Episode Sound Wavs Collection, but I reorganized Ponderous Reviews (Mine & Others) and Press Interviews and archived the AtTheHelm Naughty Nurses’ Dr Helm Whack Tracker!
Visit now at http://www.rainofhearts.com/qos/

And I’ll be on the lookout for my next commissioned website design from the outside. Are you my next client? Quotes are free!

2 Comments

  1. Whats up this is somewhat of off topic but I was wondering if blogs use WYSIWYG editors or if you have to manually code with HTML.

    I’m starting a blog soon but have no coding skills so I wanted to
    get advice from someone with experience. Any help would
    be greatly appreciated!

    1. Visual Editor is a rich text editor in the WordPress (my own blog CMS tool) post edit screen. The WordPress post edit screen has two editors, Visual and Text.

      The visual editor is a WYSIWG editor. WYSIWIG stands for “what you see is what you get” which means that however the content shows up on your display is exactly the way it will be when it is published. Editors like Microsoft Word and Pages fall into this category as well.

      WordPress comes with a modified version of TinyMCE, which is an open source WYSIWYG HTML editor. It mimics the behavior of desktop publishing tools such as Microsoft Word and even has many of their features such as a toolbar along the top allowing you to format your content.

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