Launch in Days, Not Weeks
Professional one-page website — only a few slots left this month
You need a website. You’ve got quotes from three agencies. One says two weeks, another says two months, and the third won’t commit to a timeline at all. Nobody’s lying—but nobody’s telling you the full story either.
The real answer to “how long does a website take to build” depends less on your designer’s skill and more on factors you control: content readiness, feedback speed, and how clearly you’ve defined what “done” looks like. Here’s what actually determines timelines, backed by data and a decade of building sites for UK SMB teams.
Industry data from Ramotion’s 2026 website development timeline analysis reveals stark differences based on site complexity. Here’s what you can realistically expect.
A focused landing page with a clear message, strong call-to-action, and limited sections can be designed, built, tested, and launched within 5–10 working days.
Fernside Studio’s Launch Sprint delivers custom one-page sites in exactly five days for £750 fixed. This isn’t a template rush job—it’s a structured process with strategy, design, development, and deployment all scoped to fit the timeline. The tight schedule works because:
According to development timeline research, single landing pages with custom illustrations and motion design can extend to 2–3 weeks, but the baseline for a conversion-focused single page remains 1–2 weeks with proper preparation.
The average small business website requires 4–6 weeks according to multiple industry sources. This covers:
Fernside Studio’s Studio Site projects typically land in the 4–6 week range for sites with 5–10 pages. Projects stretching to 8 weeks usually involve:
Research confirms that “proper planning, strategic task distribution, and early client involvement help significantly reduce the time it takes to finish a website.” When clients arrive with content ready and objectives defined, we consistently hit 4-week timelines. When they don’t, we’re looking at 6–8 weeks.
Sites requiring product catalogues, payment integrations, inventory systems, or custom backend functionality demand 2–3 months minimum. Enterprise-level platforms with extensive API connections, sophisticated backend programming, and advanced security measures require 6+ months.
Fernside Studio doesn’t build e-commerce platforms—we focus on marketing sites where speed and conversion clarity matter more than cart functionality. If you need e-commerce, expect longer timelines and higher budgets regardless of who you work with.
Industry statistics tell part of the story. Real project experience reveals the factors that make or break schedules.
According to research on common project delay factors, “companies usually save the task of content creation for the last minute which is one of the most common reasons of delay in website projects.”
Here’s what “content ready” actually means:
Research shows SEO-optimised long-form content requires 4–6 weeks to create before launch. If you’re starting from a blank page when your designer starts building, add a month to your timeline—or launch with thin content that doesn’t convert.
Our post on how to brief your web studio explains exactly what to prepare before project kickoff. Founders who follow that guidance launch 2–3 weeks faster than those who wing it.
Data shows that organisations prioritising client feedback are 26% more likely to meet project requirements, but the same research reveals that “when firms fail to provide timely feedback, data and approvals, there is a huge delay in completing the project.”
Designers can’t progress until you’ve reviewed their work. If you take three days to respond to every design review, and there are four review rounds, you’ve just added 12 days to the timeline—nearly three weeks of pure waiting.
Fast feedback patterns:
Slow feedback patterns:
If you need consensus from multiple stakeholders, build that into your timeline. Don’t promise a 4-week project if your board meets monthly.
Projects with documented requirements before development are 6.5 times more likely to succeed than those rushing into development without proper planning, according to project management research.
Vague briefs breed scope creep. “A multi-page marketing site” becomes wildly different when you realise halfway through that you forgot to mention:
When scope changes mid-project, timelines slip. Structured change management reduces overruns by 30%, but only when both parties acknowledge that new requirements mean adjusted timelines or reduced features elsewhere.
Fernside Studio addresses this upfront. Launch Sprint scope is fixed—one page, specific sections, no feature creep. Studio Site projects begin with onboarding workshops that map scope precisely before any design work starts. If clients request additions mid-project, we scope them as separate phases or tickets.
Design complexity adds measurable time according to timeline research:
This is why Fernside Studio builds on Astro—it’s fast for designers to develop and fast for visitors to load, but flexible enough for custom layouts when needed. We don’t use WordPress or traditional CMS platforms that require extensive plugin configuration and customisation.
Custom doesn’t always mean better. A well-designed static site often outperforms a heavily customised CMS installation—and ships in half the time.
Simple sites need basic hosting and a contact form. Complex sites need CRM integrations, payment processors, marketing automation connections, and API authentication.
Each integration adds:
If you need your site to connect to Salesforce, Mailchimp, Stripe, and a booking platform, expect at least an extra week—more if APIs are poorly documented or authentication workflows are complicated.
Fernside projects typically include:
Anything beyond that—live chat widgets, CRM connections, calendar embeds—gets scoped separately so timelines remain realistic.
Some agencies juggle 20 clients simultaneously. Others focus on 2–3 active projects. Your timeline depends partly on where you sit in their queue.
Ask potential designers:
Fernside Studio’s approach is intentionally constrained. We don’t scale by hiring a roster of freelancers and offshoring development. Projects get focused attention from start to finish, which is why we can confidently commit to 5-day and 4-week timelines when scope and content are solid.
Let’s be direct: most website delays trace back to clients, not designers.
According to project failure research, approximately 50% of projects are considered challenged, with poor communication ranking as the primary culprit. When clients start projects without clear objectives, documented content, or defined success metrics, designers are building blind.
Ambiguous briefs create:
Investing three hours in a proper brief (here’s how) prevents three weeks of revision cycles.
More than a third of UK SMB staff cite failure to communicate effectively as their biggest cause of stress, and 86% of employees attribute workplace failures to lack of effective communication.
When website decisions involve your co-founder, marketing manager, sales director, and “a friend who knows design,” you get:
Solution: appoint one decision-maker with authority to approve designs without committee votes. Gather input, but don’t let every opinion carry equal weight.
Founders delay launches waiting for perfect copy, ideal photography, and flawless content. Meanwhile, their current site—or lack of one—costs them leads daily.
Research on website launch mistakes emphasises that “issues around tracking, content readiness, security, and compliance rarely appear as launch-day problems—they surface later as blind spots and unreliable reporting.”
Launch with strong fundamentals and iterate based on real visitor behaviour. Your first version doesn’t need to be your forever version. What matters is getting a conversion-focused site live so you can start gathering data.
Our guide to what happens in the first 7 days after launch shows how Fernside monitors sites post-launch to catch issues early and iterate based on real performance data.
Not every business needs the fastest option. Match timeline to your actual needs.
Book a Launch Sprint for £750 fixed and launch in five working days.
Scope a Studio Site from £2,400 depending on complexity and page count.
Fernside doesn’t typically build these projects—we specialise in fast, focused marketing sites that convert. But if your needs extend beyond marketing, expect longer timelines regardless of provider.
Our process is built around timeline predictability.
Launch Sprint is five days, no exceptions. We achieve this by:
Studio Site timelines are scoped project-by-project during onboarding, but we commit to the agreed timeline in writing. If scope changes, we re-scope the timeline before proceeding.
You’ll always know where the project stands:
We’re explicit about what we need from you and when. Our onboarding materials specify:
When clients meet these commitments, projects finish on schedule. When they don’t, we communicate timeline impacts immediately—not at the original deadline when it’s too late.
Timeline questions don’t end at launch. SMB founders want to know what ongoing work looks like.
Every Fernside build includes first-week monitoring:
See our detailed breakdown of what happens in the first 7 days after launch.
Fernside doesn’t sell retainers. We offer ticket-based support where you pay only for actual work:
Each ticket is scoped and quoted before work begins. Most updates process within 2–5 working days depending on complexity.
For clients who want to manage approved content sections themselves, Fernside CMS provides a hosted panel at £29/month including:
This eliminates the wait for simple content changes while maintaining design integrity and site performance.
The average small business website takes 4–8 weeks. But “average” hides enormous variation.
Fast projects share common traits:
Slow projects suffer from:
The timeline is largely in your control. Choose a designer whose process matches your readiness level, prepare properly, commit to fast feedback, and you’ll launch on schedule.
If you need a conversion-focused site fast and you’re willing to prepare properly, Fernside Studio’s Launch Sprint delivers in five days for £750 fixed. If you need a multi-page marketing site with custom design and more breathing room for content refinement, Studio Site builds launch in 4–6 weeks from £2,400.
The question isn’t just “how long does a website take to build” — it’s “how quickly can you make decisions, provide content, and commit to launching?” Every week without a proper website is a week your competitors are pulling ahead and capturing the leads that should be yours.
We only take on a few builds each month, and Launch Sprint slots book out quickly. Check availability and we’ll confirm your earliest build slot within 24 hours. The businesses winning online aren’t waiting — they’re building now.
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