If you’re running a website, you absolutely need SEO. There’s no way around it. Fail to optimise your website’s content, and you will have no presence during Google searches. It doesn’t take a genius to work out this is bad. Really bad.
After all, a successful website is reliant on Google to draw in new customers. Nobody will come across your site via luck. Instead, they will type in an enquiry relevant to your business, click on one of the first results to pop up on Google, and visit one of your competitors.
http://aboutmanchester.co.uk/local-seo-5-tips-for-optimising-your-website/
Web designing and its understanding, user experience should be acknowledged. Users will remember their visit to a website even if they do not remember the salient features and main points of that web. And this makes it an even more critical position than knowing about the website thoroughly.
The layout, text, interactive elements, and graphics are the main points that not only provide the user with information. But it assists the visitor’s experience, and it serves to make it a memorable experience for the user and more likely to be shared on social media for further promotion. UX design is an active fragment of web work.
http://ventsmagazine.com/2019/12/03/everything-you-need-to-know-about-web-design-user-experience/
In digital environments, it’s fairly simple to gauge customer attitudes—at least in part—based on the behavior of those customers. If they come back to the website over and over, they are very satisfied with what they find there, they are gluttons for punishment, or they are your Mom.
Email provides its own built-in success metrics in the form of open rates, click-through rates, unsubscribe rates, and the rest.
Online forms have conversion rates to infer similar achievements.
http://www.convinceandconvert.com/baer-facts/easy-feedback-mechanisms-are-key-to-customer-experience-optimization/