Categories: The Looking Glass

How to Write an RFP for Website Development

The good news: your company is getting a new website! The not-so-good news: you need to find a website development company. You’ve been tasked with asking for and compiling a ton of information to evaluate and compare several potential website designers.

In other words, you’re in charge of writing an RFP for website development.

The truth is, many agencies dread receiving RFPs as much as, if not more than, clients dread writing them. In fact, some agencies have a strict policy of refusing to respond to any formal Requests for Proposal. Ever.

Is the RFP really all that bad?

Sometimes. But it doesn’t have to be. So, how do you write an RFP for website development?

Let’s start with the problem. The purpose of an RFP is to identify the best vendor for your job. But by serving up a very long, very restrictive RFP, you’re setting your company up to miss out on the best part.

Would you walk into a cardiologist’s office, announce that you need a valve replaced, and then tell the doctor how to do it? Probably not. Because the doctor has knowledge and experience that you don’t, and you’ve come to him precisely for that reason.

So why would you do that in your RFP?

You see, you are coming to a website development company with your request because they provide a service that your company can’t take care of internally. Because web development agencies like CMDS possess experience with a set of technical and creative skills that your organization doesn’t. So we damn well better be able to give you some ideas that you hadn’t even dreamt of.

But by restricting communication between our companies, and dictating exactly what you want and the best way to get it done, you’re missing out on that most valuable thing that we can bring to the table.

Most RFPs also leave no room for discussion, brainstorming or questions. In this world of hyper-social connectivity, is document-to-document communication really the best we can do?

Are we suggesting that the RFP must go? No. We just think that maybe it’s time for an extreme makeover.

Here are the dos and don’ts of how to write an RFP for Website Development:

Do…

(Please) Don’t:

Final thoughts

We get it. Hiring a web development company to build, or rebuild, your company’s website is a big deal. You don’t want to select the wrong vendor, spend your budget and end up with a site that doesn’t live up to your dreams. But by opening the lines of communication, and making the website development RFP process a two-way dialogue rather than a one-sided mandate, you just may find that the finished product far exceeds even your wildest expectations.

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