All answers

Q+A No. 07 Web

Should we use a website builder or hire a studio?

A builder and a studio are not rivals. They are answers to different questions, and the right one depends on what your website has to do.

The short answer

If you need a good-looking site live quickly and cheaply, and it will not change much, a builder is often the right call. Squarespace, Wix and the newer AI builders are genuinely capable, and for a first site, an event or an idea you are still testing, we will happily say so.

Bring in a studio when the website becomes part of how the business runs: several stakeholders, a marketing team that needs to update it, real content and SEO ambitions, or growth a template cannot follow. At that point you are not just buying a website. You are buying decisions that stay easy later.

The longer answer

When a builder is the right choice

For a lot of situations, a builder is the sensible answer, and paying for a studio would be paying for capacity you do not need yet. Modern builders are fast to stand up, cheap to run, and capable enough that the result does not look homemade. If the site is a starting point rather than an engine, that is usually enough.

A builder tends to be the right fit when:

  • It is your first site and you need to be visible, not perfect.
  • It exists for a single moment: an event, a launch, or a campaign that ends.
  • It is a side project or a small business where the budget is genuinely tight.
  • You are testing an idea and want to learn before you invest.
  • The content is small and stable, and one person can keep it current.
  • You do not expect the structure to change much over the next year or two.

None of that is a compromise. Getting something live and learning from it beats waiting for a bigger build you are not ready to brief.

Where builders start to cost you

The strain rarely shows up on day one. It shows up six or twelve months in, when the site has a job to do and the tool starts working against you rather than for you. The costs are real, but they are the kind that hide in time and frustration rather than an invoice.

  • A marketing person cannot update the content without nudging the layout out of shape, so edits stall or go through one nervous gatekeeper.
  • There is no content strategy underneath, so pages accumulate rather than build toward anything.
  • SEO gets harder, with less control over structure, markup and performance, and templates that were not built with search in mind.
  • Growth turns messy: new sections get bolted on, navigation swells, and the original tidy template stops holding.
  • Accessibility and governance are hard to guarantee, which matters more as the audience and the legal exposure grow.
  • The brand drifts, because the guardrails live in one person's judgement rather than in the system itself.

Any one of these is survivable. Several at once is usually the signal that the website has quietly become infrastructure, and it is being run on tools meant for something lighter.

What a studio actually adds

The honest difference is not that a studio makes a prettier page. It is judgement and a system that stays easy to run. A good build is a set of decisions made once, carefully, so the hundred smaller decisions afterwards become simple. You are buying the structure as much as the surface.

  • A CMS your own team can run day to day, so updates do not depend on us or on one person's nerve.
  • A content structure that holds as you add pages, sections and campaigns, instead of sprawling.
  • A brand that scales cleanly across every template, not just the homepage.
  • Content and SEO that stay organised because the foundations were built to carry them.

That is the same principle behind our QC Process: the work is not finished when it looks right, it is finished when it keeps working once we leave the room. Part of that is the tooling itself, which is why we tend to reach for a proper CMS. We have written about why we like Craft CMS rather than defaulting to a builder for sites that have to earn their keep.

A quick way to tell which side you are on

You do not need a scorecard. A few honest questions usually settle it. If most of your answers point one way, that is your answer, and neither answer is a failure.

  • Who needs to update this site, and how often? One person occasionally leans builder; a team regularly leans studio.
  • How many people have a say in it? A single owner is simple; several stakeholders need a structure that can hold competing needs.
  • Does search actually matter to the business, or is the site mostly a brochure people are sent to?
  • Do you expect it to grow in ways you cannot fully picture yet, or is the shape of it settled?
  • What does a wrong turn cost you? A small site can be redone; a site the business runs on cannot be casually torn up.

There is no shame in choosing a builder, and no glory in over-buying. The mistake is only ever a mismatch: running a serious website on a light tool, or paying studio rates for a page that could have been a template. We have made the fuller version of this argument in Some things should not be DIY, but the short version is simply to match the tool to the job the site has to do.

Part of Q+A, our plain-English client desk. Updated .

Q+A is the Qualls client desk: fair questions, straight answers, no jargon.

Still wondering?

No question is too basic.
Ask us directly.

Ask the question