Portland Website Redesign

Portland website redesign that fixes the real problems

If your website “looks fine” but the leads are down, the editing experience is terrifying, and mobile feels like a penalty box, you do not need a new coat of paint. You need a redesign that fixes what is structurally wrong, without torching your SEO in the process.

We are a Portland-based team. We redesign WordPress sites (and WooCommerce sites that behave like real businesses) to be clearer, faster, easier to update, more accessible, and easier for Google to understand.

When a redesign is actually the right move

We usually recommend a redesign when the underlying system is working against you. Here are the patterns we see most often.

  • Your site converts poorly, even though the business is solid.
  • Mobile usability is cramped, slow, or oddly broken in ways nobody wants to admit.
  • Editing content feels risky, inconsistent, or dependent on one person with a full calendar.
  • Your navigation grew over time and now feels like a drawer full of cables.
  • You are losing rankings after “small changes,” or you are afraid to change anything at all.

If you want a broader overview first, start with our main hub: Website redesign that fixes the real problems. Two helpful companion reads: Do I need a new website? and How often should you redesign?

What a good website redesign should improve

A redesign should improve the parts of the site that quietly determine revenue and trust. The visuals matter, but they are not the whole job.

Clarity and conversion

Most redesign failures are not visual. They are structural. People cannot quickly answer what you do, who it is for, and what to do next. We fix page intent, hierarchy, and information architecture.

Related reads: Landing page vs home page, Information architecture and SEO, Conversion rate optimization, A/B testing

Navigation that makes sense

Navigation should feel obvious. If you have to explain the menu, the menu is doing a different job than it thinks it is doing. We simplify structure and labels so people can find things without effort.

Related reads: Website navigation examples, How people scan pages

Mobile and responsive behavior

Responsive is not a checkbox. It is how your content behaves when the screen gets small and the user gets impatient. We design for readability, tap targets, and clean layout behavior across devices.

Related reads: Responsive web design, Designing for mobile

Accessibility

Accessibility makes your site usable for more humans, and it usually forces better structure and labeling. If you want the official standard, the WCAG guidelines live here: W3C WCAG.

Related reads: What is web accessibility?, Website ADA compliance

Performance and Core Web Vitals

Speed is user experience. We design within performance constraints and validate with real numbers. Plain-English Core Web Vitals context is here: web.dev Core Web Vitals.

Related reads: Improving performance and Core Web Vitals, How to speed up a WordPress website

Portland redesign without losing SEO

When rankings drop during a redesign, it is usually because of preventable problems: URL changes without redirects, content that gets thinned out, internal links that break, or templates that accidentally strip headings and schema.

  • We identify the pages that matter before anything changes.
  • We map redirects intentionally and test them.
  • We preserve internal linking and crawl paths so Google can still understand the site.
  • We validate indexing signals after launch.

Useful reads: Redesign in WordPress and keep your SEO, SEO-driven redesign and conversion, WordPress redirection, Secrets to a great URL, Building internal links, Structured data, Is my site indexed on Google?

Our redesign process

Step 1: Audit and priorities

We review content, navigation, templates, forms, analytics, performance, and the quiet failure points (like email deliverability) that cause real business damage without throwing an obvious error.

Related reads: Life cycle of a web project, Email deliverability

Step 2: Architecture and content plan

We define the sitemap, page intent, and content plan. This is where the biggest redesign wins typically come from, because it controls clarity and search continuity.

Related reads: What content should I put on my site?, Keep content up to date, Categories vs tags

Step 3: Visual design and components

Typography, spacing, hierarchy, and reusable components. Not for decoration. For readability, trust, and consistency, which also makes editing simpler later.

Related reads: Typography, How colors affect users, Homepage sliders, Website layout

Step 4: Build in WordPress with sane editing

We build with Gutenberg blocks, reusable patterns, and clean templates so your team can update pages without breaking layout. Page builders can be useful in the right hands, but we aim for maintainable, predictable editing.

Related reads: Learning the WordPress editor, Custom post types and ACF, Embrace Gutenberg

Step 5: Pre-launch testing and post-launch cleanup

We test forms, tracking, redirects, speed, responsive behavior, and indexing. Then we monitor after launch, because real traffic always finds the one edge case nobody clicked on staging.

Related reads: Pre-launch testing, Google Analytics setup, Ghost referral spam

What happens after the redesign

Launch is a milestone, not an ending. Sites drift. Plugins update. Search changes. The sites that keep winning are the ones that iterate instead of waiting for the next crisis.

If you want ongoing support, start here: WordPress maintenance and WordPress maintenance plans.

Portland service area

We work with Portland-area businesses and organizations throughout Oregon, and we often support teams in Lake Oswego, Vancouver, Washington and the broader Pacific Northwest. If you are not local, that is fine too. The internet has made geography mostly optional. Meetings still start on time.

FAQ

How long does a website redesign take?

Most small business redesigns land in the two to six month range, depending on content volume, integrations, and approvals. Speed is mostly a decision-making problem, not a technology problem.

Do we have to rewrite all our content?

No. We inventory what you have, then decide what to keep, improve, consolidate, or retire. Preserving good content is often the fastest way to protect SEO while improving usability.

Will we lose rankings?

Not if the redesign is planned responsibly. Rankings usually drop when URLs change without redirects, key pages disappear, internal links break, or content gets replaced with thinner versions. We plan around those risks and validate after launch.

Can you redesign without changing platforms?

Yes. Many redesigns are theme and structure updates on the same platform. Platform changes can make sense too, but they are a separate decision with their own risks and costs.

Ready to talk through a Portland website redesign?

Send us your goals, your current pain points, and any “do not break this” requirements. We will recommend a path that protects what is working and fixes what is not.

What Our Clients Say

Watermelon Web Works, LLC place picture
4.7
Based on 19 reviews
powered by Google
OMS Anita profile picture
OMS Anita
22:20 29 Nov 24
Watermelon Web Works has been incredible to work with. They are patient, understanding, and quick to answer any questions (or emergencies) you might have. After switching over to them to help re-vamp our online retail store, we hired them to build our wholesale website as well. I can't recommend them enough - Thank you team!
Garrett Lister profile picture
Garrett Lister
19:55 10 Jul 24
Jared and the watermelon team were great - they quickly interpreted our website needs and designed a wonderful site. The project management site worked great to keep track of project.
N B profile picture
N B
21:23 14 Nov 23
My previous web developer who I was very happy with retired and I was pretty sad about it because it seems now days it is hard to hire a web developer close by with a good set of skills who is interested in helping small business at reasonable prices. Then I found Watermelon and I have been very happy. They are responsive, are able to solve problems, and work at reasonable prices.
Dark Star Magick profile picture
Dark Star Magick
18:05 03 May 23
We hired Watermelon to help us with our website. They were very thorough and took the time to explain in layman's terms what they were doing and how we could improve SEO and site functionality. We will definitely be back for future website needs!
Astoria Column profile picture
Astoria Column
18:42 24 Apr 23
Great work and amazing service! We're a non-profit, and our priorities are always focused on maintaining the Astoria Column. We had a website built by someone else a few years ago, but without regular updating and maintenance, sections of our site were no longer functional. Joanna and the rest of the team came in and had everything working within a week and it's been smooth sailing since then!
Ben Harris profile picture
Ben Harris
19:25 26 Aug 19
Watermelon has been a fantastic web development partner. Through every phase of our project they have always been 100% responsive to our requests and have always provided highly knowledgeable, creative, prompt, and personable team members to work with. As a financial institution we’re always concerned about the security and maintenance or our website and Watermelon has always provided the appropriate resources in order to meet and/or exceed our compliance and security requirements. We would surely refer them to any business associates looking for a qualified WordPress web designer in the future. – Denali Federal Credit Union
Mohr IP Law Attorneys profile picture
Mohr IP Law Attorneys
00:33 11 Apr 19
Watermelon Web Works did a great job creating a custom shopping cart page for our firm. Gavynn in particular was especially helpful and responsive. We appreciated the upfront costs and the technical competency of Watermelon Web Works and would not hesitate to work with the people there again.
Kim Markle profile picture
Kim Markle
23:36 08 Feb 19
Our company has been working with the Watermelon team for more than 10 years to help build and grow our website and customer portal. They are not only extremely talented and responsive, but are continuously looking for ways for us to enhance our current website. They are consistent, provide excellent customer service and really know what they are doing. Highly recommend!
Rick Brodner profile picture
Rick Brodner
23:23 12 May 17
I cannot say enough good things about Watermelon. They are terrific communicators, highly competent coders, and really, really nice people. They were instrumental in helping us to assemble a very usable, easily maintainable website for our organization. They' have demonstrated great flexibility in accommodating our evolving needs. They have been highly responsive to any technical issues, typically resolving them in less than 4 hours. Watermelon Web Works will make your organization better, and your CFO/Treasurer will be happy when they see the bill - what more can you ask for?
CLOSE