Web Development Agency
Websites that load fast, rank well, and hold up long after launch.
We’re a small team of developers who design, build, and maintain websites for businesses tired of slow themes, bloated plugins, and freelancers who go quiet after the invoice clears. WordPress, Shopify, WooCommerce, or something built from scratch — we choose the platform that fits the job, not the one that’s easiest for us to sell.
Websites launched
Years building for the web
Industries served
Clients still with us after year one
What We Build
Fourteen services, one small team that actually does the work
Most agencies list twenty services and specialize in none of them. Here’s what fills our days, in plain terms rather than brochure language.
Custom Website Development
Built from the ground up when an off-the-shelf platform can’t do what your business needs.
WordPress Development
Custom themes and functionality — not fifteen plugins duct-taped together and hoped for the best.
Shopify Development
Storefronts, custom sections, and app integrations for growing e-commerce brands.
WooCommerce
Full-featured online stores built on WordPress, for businesses that want to own their stack outright.
Landing Page Design
Focused, single-purpose pages built to convert traffic from one specific campaign or offer.
Business Websites
The digital front door for service businesses, clinics, firms, and local companies.
Portfolio Websites
Clean, fast sites that let creative and professional work speak for itself.
SEO-Friendly Websites
Built with the technical foundation search engines need in place from day one, not bolted on later.
Website Optimization
Speed, structure, and code cleanup for sites that already exist but underperform.
Performance Optimization
Deeper technical work — caching, database tuning, and smarter asset delivery.
AI Integrations
Smarter search, support, and automation, added where it solves a real problem for real visitors.
Website Maintenance
Updates, backups, monitoring, and small fixes handled on an ongoing basis.
Speed Optimization
Targeted work to bring load times down when speed itself is the priority.
Technical Consulting
An outside, technical opinion before you commit budget to a platform or a rebuild.
Why Businesses Choose Us
A handful of things tend to come up in the first conversation
Most people who reach out to us aren’t shopping for a website. They’re fixing one — something slow, hard to update, or built by someone who’s stopped answering emails.
We say no when we should
Not every project needs a custom build, and not every business needs Shopify. If WordPress and an afternoon of configuration solves your problem, we’ll tell you that instead of selling you more.
You talk to the person doing the work
No account manager relaying feedback to a developer you’ll never meet. The person writing the code is the person answering your email.
We inherit messy projects without the lecture
Broken WooCommerce setups, unindexed pages, undocumented plugin conflicts — we’ve untangled enough of these that surprises are rare.
Performance and SEO aren’t add-ons
We don’t hand you a slow site and then sell a separate “optimization package” to fix what should have been right the first time.
Everything we build, you own
Source code, content, and hosting credentials — all of it. If you ever want to leave, there’s no lock-in and no ransom.
We document what we do
Every update and every technical decision gets written down somewhere you can find it — not just left in one developer’s head.
A website’s job is to load fast, explain what you do, and make the next step obvious. Everything else is decoration.
How We Work
How a project actually moves from idea to launch
Every project is a little different, but the shape of the work rarely changes. This is the version we tell clients before we start, not the tidied-up version that goes in a slide deck.
Discovery and requirements
We start with questions, not templates: who your customers are, what the site actually needs to do for the business, and what technical constraints already exist — an existing CRM, a booking tool, a specific hosting requirement.
Sitemap and content planning
Before any design work starts, we map every page the site needs, what each one should rank for, and where the content gaps are — so they’re caught here, not discovered after launch.
Wireframes and design
We design mobile-first, starting with the smallest screen and working up, so nothing important gets squeezed in as an afterthought once the desktop version looks finished.
Development
Front-end and back-end work happens in a private staging environment, so nothing touches your live site or DNS until it’s actually ready.
Quality assurance
Real devices, not just a browser’s device emulator. We check forms, checkout flows, page speed, and cross-browser rendering before anything gets called finished.
Launch
DNS changes, redirects for any URLs that are moving, analytics and search console setup, and a final speed and security check once the site is live.
Post-launch support
The first few weeks after launch are when real users find the edge cases design and QA didn’t. We stay close to the site during that window, not on standby for a ticket.
Technologies We Use
The technology behind the work
We’re not loyal to a single stack for its own sake. The right technology depends on what the site needs to do, who updates it after launch, and what it should cost to run.
Platforms and CMS
- WordPress — content-heavy sites and businesses that want an editor their whole team can use
- WooCommerce — stores that need full control over checkout, shipping rules, and product data
- Shopify — e-commerce brands that want a managed platform with a mature app ecosystem
- Headless and custom setups — projects where a standard CMS can’t keep up
Front-end
- Semantic HTML5 and modern CSS, including Grid and Flexbox, for layouts that don’t depend on a framework to function
- Vanilla JavaScript for most interactivity, with React or Vue reserved for projects where the complexity actually justifies it
Back-end and infrastructure
- PHP for WordPress and WooCommerce-based projects
- Node.js for custom applications and API-driven builds
- Managed hosting with server-level caching, staging environments, and daily backups — not the cheapest shared plan we can find
Tools we rely on daily
- Git for version control, so every change is tracked and reversible
- Lighthouse and real-device testing for performance and accessibility audits
- Search Console and analytics for tracking what happens after launch, not just at launch
| Platform | Best for | Who can update it | SEO control |
|---|---|---|---|
| WordPress | Content sites, blogs, service businesses | Non-technical staff, with basic training | Full control over structure, plugins, and metadata |
| Shopify | Product-based e-commerce at any scale | Non-technical staff | Solid, though some technical SEO is limited by the platform |
| WooCommerce | Stores that want WordPress-level flexibility | Non-technical staff, more setup upfront | Full control, same as WordPress |
| Custom-built | Unique features, complex logic, specific performance needs | Usually needs a developer for structural changes | Full control, built to spec |
Performance Philosophy
How we think about performance
Performance isn’t a task we schedule for the week before launch — it’s a constraint we design around from the first wireframe. A homepage with four sliders, an autoplay video background, and a chat widget loaded from three different services isn’t slow by accident. It’s slow because speed wasn’t part of the conversation early enough.
We measure performance the way Google does: Largest Contentful Paint, which is how quickly the main content appears; Interaction to Next Paint, how quickly the page responds once someone actually clicks or taps something; and Cumulative Layout Shift, whether the page jumps around while it loads. Together these are the Core Web Vitals, and they matter for two reasons — they affect search rankings, and they affect whether a visitor sticks around long enough to become a customer.
Fast doesn’t mean stripped down. It means every image, script, and font on the page earns its place, rather than shipping by default because a template included it.
SEO Web Development
SEO starts in the code, not after launch
A lot of SEO advice focuses on content and backlinks, and both matter, but neither can fix a technical foundation working against you. Before a single blog post gets written, the site itself needs to give search engines every reason to crawl, understand, and rank it well.
- Clean URL structures that describe the page, not a string of database parameters
- Proper heading hierarchy — one clear top-level heading per page, with headings chosen for meaning, not font size
- Structured data so search engines understand what a page is — a product, an article, a local business — without guessing
- Descriptive alt text written for someone using a screen reader first and a search engine second
- Sitemaps and a robots.txt file that reflect the site’s actual structure, kept current as it changes
- Canonical tags to prevent duplicate content issues, especially on stores with filtered or sorted product views
We’ll also say plainly what we don’t do: we don’t stuff keywords into invisible text, we don’t submit your site to some list of “500 search engines,” and we won’t promise a page-one ranking by a specific date. Nobody honestly can. What we can do is make sure the technical side of your site is never the reason it isn’t ranking.
Mobile-First Development
Mobile-first isn’t just responsive design
Responsive design means a layout adjusts to fit different screen sizes. Mobile-first means designing for the smallest, most constrained screen first, then adding complexity as the screen gets bigger — not the other way around.
That distinction matters because search indexing is built primarily from the mobile version of your site, not the desktop one. If the mobile experience is an afterthought, that’s the version being judged.
In practice, that means touch targets sized for a thumb rather than a mouse cursor, navigation that doesn’t require zooming in, forms that don’t make someone squint to see which field they’re in, and testing on actual phones rather than a resized browser window. A responsive web design that only ever gets tested on a laptop usually has problems nobody catches until a real customer runs into them.
Security Approach
Security is maintenance, not a one-time setting
Most website security problems aren’t sophisticated attacks — they’re outdated plugins, weak passwords, and nobody noticing an issue for six months. Our approach is built around reducing how many ways a site can be compromised, and catching it fast if one gets through anyway.
- HTTPS everywhere, not just on the checkout page
- Scheduled updates for core software, themes, and plugins — not “whenever we remember”
- A minimal plugin footprint — every plugin is code we didn’t write and now have to trust
- Login hardening, including limited login attempts and two-factor authentication for admin access
- Off-site backups, tested periodically by actually restoring them
- A web application firewall to filter obvious attack traffic before it reaches your site
None of this makes a site unhackable — nothing does. It makes a site a much harder, much less interesting target, and if something does go wrong, it means restoring a clean version in hours instead of losing days rebuilding from scratch.
Accessibility Standards
Building for every visitor, not just most of them
We build to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines at the AA level, the standard most legal and industry guidance points to. In practice, that covers color contrast that keeps text readable for visitors with low vision, full keyboard navigation for anyone who can’t use a mouse or touchscreen, meaningful alt text and properly labeled form fields so screen readers can describe what’s actually on the page, visible focus states, and captions for video content.
Accessibility and SEO overlap more than people expect — semantic headings, descriptive links, and well-structured markup help screen readers and search engine crawlers for the same underlying reasons. Building accessibly from the start is almost always cheaper than retrofitting it later, and it’s the right thing to do regardless of whether it moves a ranking.
Page Speed Optimization
Where slow websites actually come from
Speed complaints almost always trace back to the same handful of repeat offenders: unoptimized images straight off someone’s phone, render-blocking third-party scripts, no caching or CDN in front of the site, bloated page-builder themes carrying code for features nobody uses, and cheap hosting that performs fine in a demo and falls over under real traffic.
Our approach: compress and serve images in modern formats like WebP or AVIF, lazy-load anything below the fold, minimize what has to load before the page becomes usable, cache aggressively, and put the site behind a CDN so it’s fast regardless of where a visitor is browsing from. A slow website gets treated the same way we’d treat a broken checkout button — as a problem worth fixing immediately, not eventually.
Website Maintenance
What actually happens after launch
Launch day is the start of a website’s life, not the end of the project. Left alone, even a well-built site accumulates problems — plugins fall out of date, new vulnerabilities get discovered in software that hasn’t changed at all, and browsers update in ways that quietly break things nobody’s watching.
- Core, theme, and plugin updates, tested in staging before they touch the live site
- Uptime monitoring, so we know about downtime before a customer has to tell you
- Security scanning and malware checks on a regular schedule
- Performance checks, so a site that launched fast stays fast as content gets added
- A short monthly summary of what was done and what, if anything, needs attention
| Plan | Update frequency | Monitoring | Support |
|---|---|---|---|
| Essential | Monthly | Uptime monitoring | Standard email support |
| Growth | Bi-weekly | Uptime and performance monitoring | Priority support, small content edits included |
| Managed | Weekly | Uptime, performance, and security monitoring | Priority support with a dedicated point of contact |
Frequently Asked Questions
Questions we hear before almost every project
How long does a typical website project take?
Most business websites take four to eight weeks from kickoff to launch, depending on how many pages there are and how quickly content and feedback come back to us. E-commerce and custom development projects usually run longer, closer to eight to fourteen weeks.
Do I need a custom-built website, or is WordPress enough?
For most businesses, WordPress or WooCommerce handles everything they actually need. Custom development makes sense when a project needs specific functionality or performance that doesn’t fit a CMS’s structure. We’ll tell you honestly which one your project needs.
Can you take over or fix a website someone else built?
Yes, and it’s a regular part of our work. We start with an audit — code quality, plugin conflicts, security gaps, SEO issues — before touching anything, so we know exactly what we’re inheriting.
Will I own my website once it’s finished?
Yes. Source code, content, and any credentials involved in running the site are yours. If you ever want to move to another developer or host, nothing locks you in.
Do you provide website hosting?
We can set you up with managed hosting suited to your platform, or work within hosting you already have. We’ll tell you plainly if your current hosting is the reason your site is slow.
What’s the difference between a landing page and a full website?
A landing page is a single, focused page built around one goal, usually driving one action from one traffic source, like an ad campaign. A full website covers your whole business — services, credibility, and multiple paths a visitor can take.
Do you build online stores?
Yes, through WooCommerce or Shopify depending on your product catalog, order volume, and how much control you want over the checkout experience.
Is the website “finished” once it launches?
Technically, yes — but launch is really day one of an ongoing relationship. Rankings develop over weeks and months, real users surface edge cases, and the web keeps changing around your site. Most clients move into a maintenance plan right after launch for this reason.
How do you handle SEO during development?
Every page is built with a clean URL, proper heading structure, fast load times, and structured data from day one. That’s the technical foundation. Content strategy and keyword targeting can be handled separately, by you, your team, or us.
Will my website actually work well on phones?
Every site we build is designed mobile-first and tested on real devices, not just a resized browser window. Given that most traffic now arrives on a phone, treating mobile as an afterthought isn’t really an option.
Do you write the content, or do I need to provide it?
Either. Some clients bring finished copy, others want us to write it as part of the project. When we write it, we ask enough questions about your business to avoid the generic, could-be-anyone copy found on so many small business websites.
How do revisions work?
Every project includes a set number of revision rounds at the design stage, built into the timeline from the start. Beyond that, changes are scoped and quoted individually so there’s no ambiguity about what’s included.
What platforms do you specialize in?
WordPress and WooCommerce for content and store-based sites, Shopify for e-commerce brands that want a managed platform, and custom development in PHP or Node.js when a project’s requirements go beyond what a CMS can comfortably handle.
Does website speed actually make that much difference?
Yes, both directly, since speed is a ranking factor, and indirectly, since slow sites lose visitors before they see what you offer. Even small delays in load time show up as a measurable drop in conversions across almost every industry that’s studied it.
Can you guarantee a #1 Google ranking?
No, and we’d be skeptical of anyone who tells you they can. Rankings depend on competition, content, and factors outside any developer’s control. What we can guarantee is a technically sound site with nothing holding back its ranking potential from a development standpoint.
What happens if my website gets hacked?
If you’re on one of our maintenance plans, we restore from a verified backup and investigate how it happened, usually within hours. This is exactly why backups get tested, not just taken — one you’ve never tried restoring is a guess, not a safety net.
How do we actually get started?
Send a short email about your project — what you’re trying to build, roughly when you need it, and any technical details you already know matter. We’ll reply with questions, not a sales pitch.
Long-Term Partnerships
Why we push for ongoing relationships, not one-off projects
A website isn’t a brochure you print once. Search algorithms shift, browsers update, payment processors change their requirements, and your business itself changes — new services, new locations, a rebrand three years in. A developer who already knows your site’s history and the reasoning behind how it was built can fix in twenty minutes what would take someone new a full day just to diagnose.
That’s the real case for an ongoing relationship over a series of one-off projects with whoever’s cheapest and available at the time: institutional knowledge stays with the same people, small issues get caught before they become expensive ones, and the site keeps improving instead of slowly decaying between rebuilds.
Industries We Serve
Industries we’ve built for
The core principles — speed, clear structure, and a credible first impression — apply everywhere. How they show up on the page changes a lot depending on who’s actually visiting the site.
- Retail and e-commerce
- Professional services
- Healthcare and wellness
- Real estate
- Hospitality and travel
- Restaurants and food service
- Education and training
- Nonprofits and community groups
- Local service businesses
- Creators and personal brands
- Technology and SaaS startups
- Media and publishing
If your industry isn’t on this list, that’s usually a five-minute conversation, not a dealbreaker — the fundamentals of a good website don’t change much from one field to the next.
Let’s Talk
If your website is holding your business back, let’s fix that
Whether that means a full rebuild, a focused round of performance and SEO work, or a straightforward new site from scratch, the first step is the same — tell us what’s going on and what you’re trying to achieve.
Contact
Get in touch
The fastest way to reach us is by email. Tell us a little about your business, what you’re hoping the website will do, and any deadlines already on the table. We usually reply within one business day.
gauravyadavvlogs4@gmail.comSend us an email
Helpful things to include
- What you’re trying to build or fix
- Roughly when you need it live
- Your current website, if you have one
- Any platform preference — WordPress, Shopify, or custom
- A rough sense of budget, if you have one in mind