Launch in Days, Not Weeks
Professional one-page website — only a few slots left this month
You’re building a business on tight margins. A £99 website builder subscription or a Fiverr freelancer quoting £150 for a “complete professional site” sounds like smart bootstrapping. Why pay thousands when you can get something live today for pocket change?
The problem surfaces six months later: platform fees you didn’t anticipate, customer complaints about slow loading, enquiry forms that don’t work, and the growing realisation that your website looks exactly like your competitors’. Now you’re shopping for a proper build anyway—and you’ve lost time, money, and customers in between.
This isn’t about expensive being better by default. Some freelancers deliver exceptional work at accessible prices, and website builders genuinely serve hobby sites and personal projects. But for businesses that depend on their website for leads, visibility, or credibility, cutting corners on the web usually costs more in the long run than building it properly the first time.
Website builder marketing focuses on low monthly subscriptions: Wix from £9/month, Squarespace from £12/month, GoDaddy promising “websites from £1/month”. These figures are technically accurate but represent only a fraction of what you’ll actually spend.
According to multiple UK web pricing studies, advertised platform prices account for just 25–40% of total ownership costs once you factor in domain renewals, premium plugins, email hosting, transaction fees, and design upgrades needed to look remotely professional.
Domain renewals: Platforms often bundle a “free” domain for year one, then charge £10–£50 annually for renewals. Miss the renewal deadline and you’ll pay premium recovery fees—or lose your domain entirely.
Premium themes and plugins: The included templates look generic or outdated. Professional-looking themes cost £40–£100 upfront. Functionality most businesses need—booking systems, advanced forms, membership areas—requires premium plugins at £30–£200 each, often billed annually.
Email hosting: Your platform subscription doesn’t include email. Professional addresses (you@yourcompany.co.uk) require separate services like Google Workspace (from £4.60/user/month) or Microsoft 365 (from £3.80/user/month). That’s another £55–£144/year minimum.
Transaction fees: If you sell products, platform e-commerce plans charge 2.5–2.9% plus 30p per transaction on top of payment processor fees. For a business processing £50,000 annually, that’s £1,250–£1,450 in platform fees alone—before Stripe or PayPal take their cut.
Storage and bandwidth: Entry-level plans cap storage at 2–10 GB. Upload high-quality images for a portfolio or product catalogue and you’ll need paid upgrades. Bandwidth limits mean your site could go offline during traffic spikes unless you pay for higher tiers.
Research from Business Image found typical monthly running costs for UK small businesses land between £50–£300 when you include all these ancillary expenses. That’s £600–£3,600 annually—more than Fernside’s Launch Sprint costs for a custom-built, professionally designed site you own outright.
Cheap websites are slow websites. Page builders generate bloated code, load unnecessary scripts, and serve unoptimised images. The business impact isn’t abstract—it’s measurable and significant.
Google’s research shows that 53% of mobile users abandon sites taking longer than three seconds to load. When pages load in one second, average conversion rate hits nearly 40%. At two seconds it drops to 34%. By three seconds you’re down to 29%.
For a business generating 1,000 site visitors monthly with a potential 3% conversion rate, the difference between a one-second and three-second load time could mean losing 110 conversions annually. If each conversion is worth £500, that slow site just cost you £55,000 in lost revenue.
A UK case study documented a business whose sales dropped from £70,000/month to £30,000/month after launching a new poorly performing website. Within six months they’d lost at least £240,000 in sales—far more than the cost of building the site properly initially.
Research surveying 206 UK business owners found that poor website performance costs businesses an average of 15% of annual revenue. Two-thirds reported direct revenue losses, while 41% cited damage to brand reputation.
This isn’t theoretical. When your site loads slowly:
Budget platforms can’t fix this. Squarespace and Wix sites typically score 30–50 on Google’s PageSpeed Insights because they’re fundamentally built on heavy, inflexible codebases. You’re stuck with the performance ceiling the platform provides.
Your website is often the first impression prospects form of your business. When it looks generic, amateurish, or identical to competitors, you’ve undermined trust before a single conversation happens.
Free and low-cost templates are used by thousands of businesses. Prospects notice. When your “About” page layout matches three other companies they just Googled, the implicit message is: “We couldn’t invest in presenting ourselves properly.”
This especially damages service businesses where trust drives conversion. Would you hire a solicitor whose website looks like a school project? Would you trust a financial advisor whose site uses stock photos from 2015?
Cheap builds cut corners on testing. Contact forms that don’t send. Links that 404. Mobile layouts that overlap text or cut off buttons. Every broken element tells visitors your business is careless.
One study found that 33% of businesses with poor website quality faced increased customer complaints, while 55% missed critical growth opportunities. Your website’s job is to remove friction from the buying process—not create it.
Responsive design isn’t automatic. Budget builds often “work” on mobile in the sense that content displays, but the experience is painful: tiny tap targets, horizontal scrolling, unreadable text, forms that break keyboard behaviour.
When 60% of Google searches now happen on mobile, a site that frustrates mobile users eliminates the majority of your addressable market.
Platforms handle security updates automatically, which sounds reassuring until you consider what that actually means: you’re trusting a massive shared infrastructure where a vulnerability in any plugin or theme can affect millions of sites simultaneously.
WordPress—the backbone of many budget builds—powers 43% of the web, making it a prime target for attacks. Sites running outdated plugins or themes face constant vulnerability to malware, data breaches, and defacement.
Customer data exposure: If your site collects enquiries, payments, or user accounts, a breach could expose customer information—triggering GDPR liability and destroying trust.
Downtime during attacks: Hacked sites go offline. Depending on your hosting provider’s response time, you could lose days of uptime while they clean and restore your site.
SEO damage: Google blacklists compromised sites, removing you from search results entirely until the issue resolves. Recovery takes months even after cleanup.
Ransom demands: Some attackers encrypt your site and demand payment for restoration. Without proper backups (often not included in budget hosting), you’re facing either paying the ransom or rebuilding from scratch.
Budget platforms mitigate some risks through managed updates, but custom functionality often requires third-party plugins or code injections that bypass platform security. Budget freelancers rarely implement proper security hardening, leaving sites vulnerable by default.
The strongest argument against cheap websites isn’t that they’re bad—it’s that they’re temporary. Most businesses outgrow or abandon them within 18 months, meaning you pay twice: once for the cheap site and again for the proper one you needed from the start.
You need functionality the platform can’t provide. Custom booking systems, member portals, complex forms, or integration with your CRM. Budget platforms hit hard functionality ceilings quickly.
Performance is costing you customers. Once you realise slow loading is tanking conversions, the monthly subscription becomes an expensive liability.
You’re embarrassed to share it. When you hesitate to send prospects to your site because you know it looks unprofessional, that’s a business problem—not a cosmetic preference.
SEO limitations block growth. Platforms restrict technical SEO control: URL structures, schema markup, server-side configuration. If organic traffic matters to your growth strategy, you’ll eventually need a proper build.
Let’s calculate actual costs for a typical scenario:
Year One (Cheap Route):
Year Two:
Combined: £3,460 over 18 months, plus the opportunity cost of lost customers, poor rankings, and damaged credibility during that period.
Compare that to Fernside’s Launch Sprint at £750 fixed for a custom one-page site built on Astro, hosted on Cloudflare Pages, with genuine performance optimisation and no ongoing platform fees. Or a Studio Site from £2,400 for a multi-page marketing site you own completely.
This isn’t a blanket condemnation of budget options. Context matters. Here’s when cheap websites actually work:
Personal projects and hobbies: If you’re documenting your photography hobby or sharing recipes, a Wix or Squarespace site is perfectly adequate. You’re not depending on it for business outcomes.
Temporary landing pages: Testing a new business idea or running a short-term campaign? A quick Carrd or Webflow build can validate demand before committing to a full site.
Very early-stage validation: If you’re genuinely not sure whether your business will exist in six months, a budget site lets you establish presence while you figure out product-market fit.
Your website generates leads or sales. If your business depends on your site for customer acquisition, performance and credibility directly impact revenue. Budget platforms can’t deliver what you need.
You’re in a competitive market. When prospects compare you to competitors, looking cheap or slow costs you deals. Professional presentation becomes table stakes.
You need specific functionality. Custom forms, integrations, booking systems, member areas—anything beyond basic pages and a contact form usually requires custom development.
SEO matters to your growth strategy. If organic search drives your customer acquisition, you need technical control that platforms restrict.
Fernside Studio’s Launch Sprint offers a middle path: professional quality without enterprise pricing.
What you get for £750 fixed:
No monthly platform fees. No plugin subscriptions. No surprise costs. You own the code and content outright.
Post-launch content updates handled via Fernside’s ticket-based support—you pay only when you need help, avoiding recurring retainer waste.
For businesses needing multiple pages, the Studio Site starts at £2,400 and includes onboarding workshops, wireframes, and optional Fernside CMS (£29/month) for safe client editing.
The real cost of a cheap website isn’t the upfront price—it’s the customers you lose to slow loading, the credibility you sacrifice through generic design, the opportunity cost of delaying proper presence, and the rebuild expense when you inevitably outgrow the platform.
Ask yourself these questions:
Does your business depend on your website for leads, sales, or credibility? If yes, the site is a core business asset—not a cost to minimise.
Will you need functionality beyond basic pages and a contact form? Custom features break budget platforms quickly.
Are you competing in a market where professionalism matters? If prospects evaluate multiple options, perception drives conversion.
Do you have 12–18 months to spare before rebuilding? Most businesses regret cheap sites within that timeframe.
If you answered yes to any of these, budget platforms are false economy. You’ll pay less upfront and more overall—in direct costs, lost revenue, and wasted time.
Ready to build it properly the first time?
Every month on a cheap platform is another month of lost leads, damaged credibility, and money you’ll never recover. The rebuild is coming either way — the only question is how much revenue you lose before you make the switch.
Book a Launch Sprint for £750 fixed — professionally designed, genuinely fast, and launched within five days. Or scope a Studio Site if you need multiple pages and advanced functionality. We only take on a few builds each month to maintain quality. Check availability and we’ll confirm your earliest slot within 24 hours.
Still deciding what your website actually needs? Read our guides on how much websites cost in the UK, replacing Wix or Squarespace, and whether your current site is good enough. Or talk to Liam about your specific situation — we’ll tell you honestly whether Fernside is the right fit.
Research and statistics cited in this article:
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