In this episode, we speak with Judd Lyon, a B2B website strategist with more than 20 years of experience building high performing websites.

The core idea is simple.

A website strategy is not a design exercise.
It is a plan to win.

When strategy comes first, design becomes purposeful.
When strategy is skipped, even a beautiful website can struggle to deliver results.

The biggest mistake: starting with design

Many website projects begin the same way.

Teams want to see:

  • homepage designs
  • color palettes
  • layouts
  • visual mockups
  • development progress

But without strategy, those outputs are premature.

Judd explains that effective websites follow a different sequence:

  1. Strategy and stakeholders
  2. Market and messaging
  3. Architecture and aesthetics

Only after these are clear should design begin.

Because design is not the foundation of a website.

Design is the expression of the strategy.

What website strategy actually means

Strategy is often misunderstood as a vague planning phase.

In reality, it answers a few critical questions:

  • What role should the website play in the business?
  • Who is the website meant to serve?
  • What problems are visitors trying to solve?
  • What information do they need before taking the next step?

When these questions are answered clearly, the website becomes much easier to structure and build.

Without this clarity, teams often create pages that look good but do not support real business outcomes.

Every page should have a job

One of the most practical ideas from the conversation is simple:

Every page on the website should have a clear job.

Not just a topic.
A job.

For example, a page might exist to:

  • explain a product or service clearly
  • answer a common question
  • help visitors compare options
  • build trust through proof or examples
  • guide visitors toward a next step

If a page does not contribute to the visitor journey or business goals, it likely should not exist.

Over time, many websites accumulate pages that serve no real purpose. Removing that clutter can improve clarity immediately.

Messaging matters more than most teams think

Design tends to get the most attention in website projects.

But messaging often has a much bigger impact on performance.

Visitors arrive with questions. If the website does not answer those questions quickly and clearly, they leave.

Strong messaging helps visitors understand:

  • what the business does
  • who it helps
  • what problems it solves
  • why it is credible
  • what they should do next

Many companies struggle with this because of what Judd describes as the curse of knowledge.

Internally, the business understands its products or services deeply.
Externally, visitors may be encountering it for the first time.

The website’s job is to bridge that gap.

Alignment before execution saves time later

Another key takeaway from the episode is the importance of stakeholder alignment.

When leadership, marketing, and internal teams are not aligned on what the website should communicate, projects slow down and decisions become difficult.

Before moving into design and development, it helps to align on:

  • the target audience
  • core messaging
  • page structure
  • website goals
  • ownership of the project

This alignment reduces confusion later and makes execution much smoother.

Treat your website as a living system

A website should not be treated as a one time project.

It should evolve based on real visitor behavior.

Some of the most valuable signals come from:

  • form submissions
  • internal site search queries
  • visitor navigation paths
  • questions heard during sales conversations

These signals reveal what visitors are trying to find and where the website may still need improvement.

Over time, the website becomes a feedback system that helps the business understand its audience better.

The feedback loop most teams miss

One of the most valuable insights in the episode is the importance of feedback loops between sales and marketing.

Sales teams hear real customer questions every day.

They hear:

  • common objections
  • confusion around products or services
  • what prospects struggle to understand
  • what information buyers want before moving forward

That information is incredibly valuable for improving website messaging.

When sales insights feed back into marketing and the website, the site becomes more useful and more effective over time.

Where AI can help

AI is becoming a useful tool for teams working on websites.

But its role is supportive, not strategic.

It can help with tasks such as:

  • summarising complex information
  • organizing research
  • documenting decisions
  • analysing data patterns

These capabilities make it easier for teams to process information quickly.

But strategy, judgment, and decision making still require human thinking.

What to do next

If your website is not performing the way you expected, start with the fundamentals.

1. Clarify the website’s role

What business outcome should the website support?

2. Align the internal team

Make sure leadership, sales, and marketing share the same direction.

3. Review page purpose

Identify whether every page serves a clear role.

4. Simplify the messaging

Make it easier for visitors to understand what you do and why it matters.

5. Build feedback loops

Use insights from sales conversations and visitor behavior to improve the site continuously.

Episode: Website Strategy for Manufacturing Companies (What Actually Works) with Judd Lyon