Custom Web Design & Development Services

Web Design & Development.
Eight Specialized Disciplines. One In-House Studio.

RMG Web Marketing operates web design and development as eight specialized disciplines under one in-house studio: custom website design, AI-driven web design, local web design, church web design, SEO-friendly web design, mobile-first design, e-commerce development, and ADA compliance. Every discipline shares the same standard of craft, the same in-house build team, and the same honest editorial positioning — but each is genuinely specialized for the audience and the technical work it serves. This page is the parent for all eight; pick the discipline that fits your project, or start with a free consultation and we’ll help you decide.

Most agencies sell “web design” as one undifferentiated service. The pitch sounds the same whether the project is a five-page brochure site for a local plumber, an e-commerce platform for a multi-product brand, a church website with online giving integration, an ADA-compliance retrofit on a hospitality site, or an SEO-architected rebuild for a B2B firm trying to rank competitively. The reality is that each of those projects requires a meaningfully different build approach — different discovery questions, different technical priorities, different specialists, different deliverables, different timelines, and different success metrics. Agencies that pitch them all the same way usually produce a flat, generic product that satisfies none of them well. Web design and development isn’t one discipline; it’s a family of related disciplines that share underlying craft but require honest specialization.

RMG splits web work into eight specialized disciplines because each one carries different technical priorities and serves a different buyer. Custom website design is the flagship discipline — fully bespoke design, custom-coded where it matters, page-builder integration where it serves the project. AI-driven web design applies AI tooling to accelerate appropriate builds at lower cost without sacrificing creative direction. Local web design is purpose-built for local-service businesses, with local search architecture, Google Business Profile integration, and local schema baked in. Church web design serves the faith sector with ministry-aware content architecture, online giving integration, and tone disciplined for the audience. SEO-friendly web design bakes search architecture into the build from day one rather than bolting it on after launch. Mobile-first design treats the phone as the primary viewport, with Core Web Vitals performance tuned on real-world hardware. E-commerce development handles WooCommerce, Shopify, and custom builds with payment, inventory, and order management integrated. ADA compliance builds WCAG 2.1 AA accessibility into new sites and retrofits it onto existing ones.

Based in Fairfield, Texas and serving clients across the country, RMG runs all eight disciplines with the same in-house team, the same Montserrat-driven design system rigor, the same WordPress and Elementor Pro foundation where the project fits that stack, and the same honest editorial positioning that runs through every page of this site. Whether your project is a single discipline (a new church website, an e-commerce platform, an accessibility retrofit) or a hybrid (a mobile-first, SEO-architected local business site with AI-assisted build acceleration), the engagement runs through one studio with one accountable team — no farmed-out subcontractors, no offshored development, no white-label resellers stamping their logo on someone else’s work. Use the discipline grid below to pick the page that matches your project, or skip directly to a consultation and we’ll help you choose.

Frequently Asked

Web Design & Development Questions? We Have Honest Answers.

Plain-English answers about how RMG approaches web design and development, the difference between design and development, how to choose between our eight specialized disciplines, the technology platforms we build on, realistic pricing and timelines, hosting and maintenance, and how to think about redesigning an existing website.

What’s the difference between web design and web development?+
Two related disciplines that overlap in practice but are genuinely distinct in craft. Web design covers the visual and experiential side: layout, typography, color, hierarchy, imagery, interaction patterns, motion, and how the site looks and feels across breakpoints. Web designers think about brand expression, conversion architecture, user flow, accessibility, and the visual system that holds the whole site together. Web development covers the technical implementation: HTML, CSS, JavaScript, server-side code (PHP for WordPress, Liquid for Shopify, Node or Python for custom builds), database design, integrations with third-party tools (payment processors, CRMs, email platforms, analytics), performance optimization, security, and the back-end functionality that makes the site actually work. On simple brochure sites, one person often handles both. On complex projects (e-commerce, custom functionality, integrations, performance-critical sites), the disciplines separate into specialists who collaborate. RMG runs design and development in-house with overlapping team members and a unified workflow, which means the design decisions get made with implementation feasibility in mind and the development decisions get made with design intent preserved. Agencies that separate design and development as siloed handoffs often produce sites where the launched product diverges meaningfully from the original design — we don’t work that way.
Why does RMG split web work into eight specialized disciplines?+
Because each discipline serves a meaningfully different audience and carries genuinely different technical priorities. Treating them all as one generic "web design" service produces three predictable problems: sites that don’t serve the vertical well (a church site sold as "we do all websites" tends to read as a brochure site with a donate button bolted on, not a ministry tool); sites that miss the technical specialization they actually needed (a local business that needed local-search architecture instead gets a generic five-page site; a healthcare practice that needed ADA compliance instead gets a beautiful design that violates accessibility law); and sites built on the wrong cost-vs-craft point for the project (a small business that could have been served by AI-driven build acceleration at lower cost instead pays enterprise pricing for fully-custom work it didn’t need). Each of our eight disciplines exists because the audience and the technical priorities are different enough to warrant a different approach: Website Design for fully-custom flagship builds, AI-Driven Web Design for budget-conscious projects, Local Web Design for local-service businesses, Church Web Design for the faith sector, SEO-Friendly Web Design where search ranking is the primary goal, Mobile Web Design for mobile-first audiences, E-Commerce Development for online stores, and ADA Compliance for accessibility-required sites and retrofits. The disciplines aren’t mutually exclusive — a project can combine multiple (mobile-first plus SEO plus local plus ADA, for instance) — but starting from the right discipline produces meaningfully better results than starting from "generic website."
How do I know which discipline is right for my project?+
Start with the dominant priority for your project. If the audience is local-service buyers searching on phones (plumber, dentist, restaurant, attorney, contractor), Local Web Design is probably the entry discipline; we’ll fold in mobile-first design and SEO architecture as part of it. If the project is a church, ministry, or faith-based nonprofit, Church Web Design is the entry discipline regardless of size. If the project is an online store, E-Commerce Development is the entry discipline; we’ll fold in mobile-first design (because mobile commerce is the majority) and SEO architecture as part of it. If you’re building a new corporate or brand site with budget for fully-custom work, Website Design is the entry discipline; AI-Driven Web Design becomes the alternative if budget is tighter and the project fits the AI-assisted build model. If you’re building primarily to rank for competitive search terms, SEO-Friendly Web Design is the entry discipline. If your existing site has accessibility issues (or you’re in healthcare, education, or government where ADA risk is real), ADA Compliance is the entry discipline (often layered onto a redesign in another discipline). If you don’t know, that’s fine — a 30-minute consultation surfaces the right discipline in most cases. We don’t upsell into the most expensive discipline; we recommend the one that fits the project. AI-Driven Web Design at $4,500 is the right answer for a lot of small-business projects, and we say so.
What platforms do you build on?+
Primarily WordPress with Elementor Pro for most builds, plus Shopify for e-commerce projects that fit Shopify’s strengths, plus custom-coded builds where the project requires it. Why WordPress dominates our work: it powers roughly 40%+ of all websites on the internet, has the largest developer community and plugin ecosystem of any CMS, gives clients real content-edit control after launch (rather than locking them into agency-billable updates forever), runs on standard hosting environments rather than proprietary platforms, and supports the full range of complexity from a single-page brochure to enterprise multi-site networks. Elementor Pro is the page builder we use most often inside WordPress — it gives clients visual content editing post-launch while preserving custom CSS, theme structure, and performance discipline when implemented correctly. Shopify wins for e-commerce projects where the merchant wants Shopify’s fulfillment integrations, payment processing, app ecosystem, and inventory management without WordPress’s overhead. Custom-coded builds (React, Next.js, custom PHP, headless architectures) are appropriate when the project genuinely requires functionality that no off-the-shelf platform handles well. What we don’t do: lock clients into proprietary site builders (Wix, Squarespace, Weebly) that they can’t export from later. The site you pay for should be yours, hostable on any standard environment, editable by anyone who knows the platform. Our builds are portable; some agencies’ builds are not.
How much does a custom website cost?+
Honest ranges by discipline and project scope. AI-Driven Web Design: roughly $4,500–$12,000 for small-to-mid business sites where AI-assisted build acceleration fits the project. Local Web Design: roughly $4,500–$15,000 depending on page count, local SEO depth, and integration scope. Church Web Design: roughly $5,000–$18,000 depending on congregation size, online giving requirements, sermon archive scope, and ministry integration depth. Custom Website Design (fully-bespoke flagship builds): roughly $12,000–$45,000+ depending on page count, custom functionality, integrations, and design depth. SEO-Friendly Web Design: typically prices like Custom Website Design with SEO architecture as the priority constraint — $10,000–$35,000+. Mobile Web Design: typically priced like Custom Website Design — mobile-first is a design philosophy applied across other disciplines. E-Commerce Development: roughly $8,000–$45,000+ depending on platform, product catalog size, payment integration complexity, and custom functionality. ADA Compliance: for new builds, accessibility is built into the discipline price; for retrofits on existing sites, $3,500–$15,000+ depending on site size and audit findings. What drives cost: page count, custom functionality, integrations with third-party systems (CRM, payment, email, calendar, booking, inventory), content scope (do you have copy ready, or do we write it), photography and video (do you have assets, or do we produce them), and how much custom design vs. template-derived design the project requires. We give itemized quotes on every project rather than package pricing that hides the line-item drivers.
How long does a typical web project take from kickoff to launch?+
Honest ranges by discipline. AI-Driven Web Design: typically 3–6 weeks from kickoff to launch, faster than fully-custom because AI tooling accelerates layout iteration and content scaffolding. Local Web Design: typically 6–10 weeks including local SEO architecture and Google Business Profile integration. Church Web Design: typically 8–12 weeks including online giving integration, sermon archive setup, and content production where we’re writing copy. Custom Website Design: typically 10–16 weeks for mid-sized projects, longer for enterprise builds with extensive custom functionality. SEO-Friendly Web Design: typically 10–16 weeks because SEO architecture work runs in parallel with build. Mobile Web Design: timeline depends on which discipline it’s layered into; mobile-first design adds discipline rigor but not significant additional time. E-Commerce Development: typically 10–20 weeks depending on platform, catalog size, and integrations. ADA Compliance retrofit: typically 4–10 weeks depending on site size and audit scope. What slows projects down: client-side delays on content (we can’t build pages we don’t have content for), photography and video production timelines, integration approval cycles with third-party platforms, and revision rounds beyond the standard count in the project agreement. What we don’t do: promise unrealistic launch dates to win the project, then quietly slip the timeline after the deposit. The quoted timeline is the realistic one.
Do you build with page builders or custom-code from scratch?+
Both, matched to project requirements. Page builders (Elementor Pro) are the right tool for the majority of WordPress projects because they give clients real visual content-edit control after launch — add a page, update copy, swap an image, change a button label — without coming back to the agency for billable updates. Used correctly (with custom CSS where needed, performance discipline, and accessibility attention), Elementor Pro produces fast, accessible, professional sites at reasonable cost. Custom code is the right tool when the project requires functionality no page builder handles well: complex e-commerce logic, real-time data integrations, custom user flows, headless architectures, specific performance constraints, or unique interaction patterns that off-the-shelf widgets can’t replicate. The honest tradeoff: page-builder builds are faster, less expensive, and easier for clients to maintain post-launch, but with reasonable performance ceilings and a dependency on the builder remaining supported. Custom-code builds are slower, more expensive, and require developer involvement for changes post-launch, but offer total flexibility and zero builder dependency. Most projects sit in a hybrid: page-builder for the content-edited sections, custom code for the functionality that needs it. We tell clients honestly which build approach fits their project and why — not based on which approach maximizes our project margin. Some agencies push page-builders on every project because they’re fast and profitable; others push custom-code on every project because they bill higher. We pick based on project fit.
Do you provide hosting and maintenance after launch?+
Yes, as optional services, and we recommend them because websites are not "set it and forget it" deliverables. Software dependencies (WordPress core, theme, plugins, server PHP version, security patches) update constantly; sites that aren’t maintained slowly accumulate compatibility issues, security vulnerabilities, and performance degradation. Hosting: managed WordPress hosting on quality infrastructure with daily backups, automated SSL renewal, staging environments for testing changes, and uptime monitoring. We can also host on the client’s existing infrastructure if preferred (most modern managed WordPress hosts are equivalent in quality — we recommend based on what fits the client’s budget and technical comfort). Maintenance: monthly retainer programs covering core/theme/plugin updates, security monitoring, performance audits, content edits within the retainer hours, and emergency support. Different retainer tiers fit different client needs — a small-business site might fit a basic monthly retainer, while an e-commerce platform with daily updates fits a higher-tier program. What we don’t do: lock clients into hosting contracts they can’t leave, charge premium rates for routine updates, or claim maintenance is "included" when it isn’t. The hosting and maintenance pricing is transparent; clients can take it or use any other vendor; the site is portable to any standard WordPress or Shopify host.
Can you redesign or rebuild an existing website?+
Yes, and redesigns are a meaningful portion of our work. The common scenarios: the existing site is on a proprietary platform (Wix, Squarespace, GoDaddy site builder) and the client wants to move to WordPress for ownership and flexibility; the existing site was built 5–10+ years ago and looks dated, performs poorly on mobile, and doesn’t rank well; the existing site was built by a previous agency that’s no longer reachable, no longer responsive, or charging unreasonable rates for updates; the existing site has accumulated technical debt (broken plugins, outdated theme, security issues) and needs a clean rebuild; the brand has evolved and the existing site doesn’t match the current positioning. Redesign workflow: audit of the existing site (content inventory, SEO baseline, performance metrics, accessibility status, traffic patterns from analytics, conversion data), discovery on what worked and what didn’t, decisions on what content to migrate verbatim vs. rewrite vs. retire, decisions on URL structure (preserving existing URLs where they have SEO value, redirecting where they don’t), design and build per the chosen discipline, content migration with redirects in place, staged launch with redirect testing, and post-launch monitoring of analytics and search performance. SEO during redesigns: preserving existing search rankings during a rebuild is a real technical discipline — the wrong rebuild approach can tank a site’s rankings overnight. We architect redesigns with SEO continuity as a first-class concern, not an afterthought. Honest expectations: a redesign almost always temporarily affects search rankings during the transition — the goal is for the new site to recover quickly and outperform the old one over time. We tell clients this upfront.
What’s included in RMG’s web design and development services?+
Our web design and development services span eight specialized disciplines under one in-house studio. Across the disciplines, services include: project discovery and quote with honest recommendation on which discipline fits your project; UX/UI design with custom layouts, typography, color systems, and interaction patterns matched to brand and audience; visual design with original imagery direction, custom graphics, and photography integration; front-end development in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript with mobile-first responsive design across breakpoints; back-end development in PHP (WordPress), Liquid (Shopify), or custom stacks per project requirements; content management system configuration so clients have real editorial control post-launch; e-commerce platform setup with payment processor integration (Stripe, PayPal, Square, Authorize.net), inventory management, shipping integration, and order workflow; SEO architecture with RankMath configuration, schema markup, sitemap generation, internal linking structure, and on-page optimization; ADA compliance with WCAG 2.1 AA standard built into new builds and remediation for existing sites; performance optimization for Core Web Vitals (LCP, CLS, INP) on real-world hardware; security hardening with proper file permissions, security plugins, SSL configuration, and ongoing patch management; integrations with CRM, email marketing platforms, scheduling tools, analytics, conversion tracking, and any third-party systems the project requires; content production where the project includes copywriting, photography, or video; staging environment with client review before launch; redirect mapping for redesigns to preserve SEO authority; post-launch hosting and maintenance retainer programs as optional services; and continuing strategy support for clients who want web design integrated with their broader marketing program (SEO, paid advertising, social, email).
What an In-House Web Studio Looks Like
8
specialized web design and development disciplines under one in-house studio, not white-labeled or subcontracted
In-House
design, development, content, and post-launch support handled by the same accountable team — no farmed-out work
WordPress
primary build platform paired with Woocommerce for e-commerce and custom-code stacks where the project genuinely requires it
WCAG 2.1
accessibility standard built into new sites and retrofitted onto existing ones — not an upcharge, a baseline
Why It Matters

Why Web Work Needs Real Specialization

The first reason web work needs real specialization is that different vertical markets carry genuinely different requirements that one-size-fits-all “web design” doesn’t serve well. A church website has to think about the worship schedule, sermon archive, online giving, ministry pages, prayer-request workflow, and tone calibrated for the congregation rather than for retail buyers — a generic agency that treats it as “just another website” produces a brochure site with a donate button bolted on. A local-service business website has to think about local search architecture, Google Business Profile integration, proximity-aware schema, mobile-first because the audience is searching on phones, and trust signals appropriate to local buyers — a generic agency that treats it as “just another website” produces a site that ranks poorly and converts worse. An e-commerce platform has to think about payment processing, inventory, shipping, taxes, returns, abandoned cart workflows, product variants, and conversion-rate optimization — a generic agency that bolts WooCommerce onto a five-page site produces an online store that loses money. The pattern repeats for every vertical: specialization isn’t a marketing claim, it’s a craft requirement.

The second reason is that specific technical disciplines like SEO, accessibility, mobile optimization, and e-commerce require genuine depth, not a checkbox on a general site. SEO architecture (URL structure, internal linking, schema markup, technical SEO, content hierarchy, RankMath configuration) is a discipline practiced by people who do it full-time and stay current with algorithm changes — not a feature toggled on at launch. ADA compliance (WCAG 2.1 AA standard, semantic HTML, keyboard navigation, screen-reader compatibility, color contrast, focus management) is a discipline that requires actual knowledge of the law and the practice; sites that claim “ADA compliant” without doing the work create real legal exposure when audited or sued. Mobile-first design (real-device testing, Core Web Vitals performance tuning, touch-target sizing, gesture patterns, breakpoint architecture) requires testing on actual hardware in actual network conditions, not just resizing the desktop browser. E-commerce development (payment processor integration, inventory and order management, shipping calculations, tax handling, fraud prevention, abandoned cart recovery) involves real complexity that generic agencies underestimate consistently.

The third reason is that different projects sit at different cost-vs-craft points, and one pricing model doesn’t fit them all. A small local business with a $5,000 web budget shouldn’t be priced out of professional web work or pushed toward a DIY platform that locks them in — AI-driven web design exists for projects where AI tooling can accelerate build at lower cost without sacrificing creative direction or client outcomes. A mid-market brand with a $25,000 budget needs full custom design with thoughtful UX/UI decisions, professional copy, and integration depth that AI-driven builds can’t match — our flagship Website Design discipline serves that tier. An enterprise project with $100,000+ in budget needs deep custom development, complex integrations, dedicated project management, and the kind of bespoke architecture that no template-derived approach delivers. Pretending these projects all want the same product is dishonest; offering them eight specialized approaches at honest pricing per discipline is the alternative.

Our Eight Disciplines

Pick the Discipline That Fits Your Project

Each discipline has its own dedicated service page with detailed pricing, process, equipment, and case examples. Click into the one that matches your project, or start with the General Web Project consultation if you’re not sure which fits.

Discipline 01

Custom Website Design

Fully bespoke flagship builds. Original design, custom-coded where it matters, page-builder integration where it serves. The flagship discipline for brand and enterprise projects.

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Discipline 02

AI-Driven Web Design

AI tooling applied to accelerate appropriate builds at lower cost without sacrificing creative direction. Right answer for small-business projects with tighter budgets.

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Discipline 03

Local Web Design

Purpose-built for local-service businesses. Local search architecture, Google Business Profile integration, local schema, and trust signals appropriate to local buyers.

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Discipline 04

Church Web Design

Built for the faith sector. Ministry-aware content architecture, online giving integration, sermon archives, prayer-request workflow, and tone disciplined for congregations.

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Discipline 05

SEO-Friendly Web Design

Search architecture baked into the build from day one, not bolted on after launch. RankMath configuration, schema markup, internal linking structure, and content hierarchy.

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Discipline 06

Mobile-First Web Design

Phone as the primary viewport. Core Web Vitals tuned on real-world hardware, touch-target sizing, breakpoint architecture, and performance discipline for mobile networks.

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Discipline 07

E-Commerce Development

WooCommerce, Shopify, and custom stacks. Payment processor integration, inventory and order management, shipping and tax handling, and conversion-rate optimization built in.

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Discipline 08

ADA Compliance

WCAG 2.1 AA accessibility built into new builds and retrofitted onto existing sites. Semantic HTML, keyboard navigation, screen-reader compatibility, color contrast, focus management.

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How We Work

Our Universal Web Build Workflow: Discover, Design, Build, QA, Launch

Every web project moves through the same five operational phases regardless of which discipline it sits in. The depth of each phase scales with the project (a small AI-driven build moves through discovery faster than a custom flagship; an e-commerce launch has heavier QA than a brochure site) but the discipline of each phase is the same:

1

Discovery & Strategy

Kickoff conversation to understand the project: what the business does, who the audience is, what the site needs to accomplish, what the competition is doing, what the existing site (if any) does well and poorly, what the timeline looks like, what the budget is, and which of the eight disciplines fits the project. We pull analytics from the existing site where available, audit competitors honestly, document the technical requirements (integrations, custom functionality, content structure), and produce a written brief that the client signs off on before design starts. What this phase produces: a clear written scope, a discipline recommendation, a sitemap, an honest budget and timeline, and shared agreement on what success looks like at launch.

2

Design

Visual and experiential design per the chosen discipline. Wireframes for layout structure and content hierarchy, then full visual design with typography, color, imagery direction, and interaction patterns. Design happens in Figma (or equivalent design tools), reviewed across desktop and mobile breakpoints with the client, with revision rounds built into the project agreement. Design decisions account for implementation feasibility on the chosen platform, accessibility requirements (WCAG 2.1 AA), SEO architecture from the discovery brief, and brand consistency where the client has an existing identity. What this phase produces: approved design files for every template the site needs, with client sign-off before development starts.

3

Build

Front-end and back-end development per the chosen platform. WordPress with Elementor Pro for most builds, Shopify for e-commerce projects that fit Shopify’s strengths, custom-coded builds where the project genuinely requires it. Build runs on staging environments invisible to the public, with content (from discovery brief) populated as templates come online, integrations configured (payment processors, CRMs, email marketing, analytics, third-party platforms), and SEO architecture implemented (RankMath, schema markup, sitemap, internal linking). For e-commerce projects, payment processing, inventory, shipping, and tax handling get configured and tested with test transactions. What this phase produces: a complete, functional site on staging ready for QA.

4

Quality Assurance

Comprehensive testing before launch. Functional QA: every form submits, every link works, every integration fires, every payment processes correctly, every email sends. Cross-browser testing: Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge on desktop; Safari and Chrome on mobile; testing in real conditions, not just emulators. Cross-device testing: real iPhones, real Android phones, real tablets, multiple screen sizes — not just dev-tools resizing. Performance audit: Core Web Vitals (LCP, CLS, INP) measured and tuned. Accessibility audit: WCAG 2.1 AA standard verified with automated tools and manual keyboard navigation testing. SEO audit: metadata, schema, sitemap, internal linking, robots.txt verified. Security check: SSL configured, security plugins active, file permissions hardened, admin credentials reviewed. Content review: every page proofread, every image alt-tagged, every CTA tested. Client review with at least one revision round before launch.

5

Launch & Post-Launch Support

Coordinated launch from staging to production with DNS configuration, redirect mapping (for redesigns), SSL verification, analytics activation, and Search Console submission. Post-launch monitoring for the first 30–60 days to catch any issues that surface in production traffic. For redesigns, search-ranking monitoring during the transition window to verify the redirect strategy is preserving SEO authority. Client training on the CMS so post-launch content edits are within the client’s control. Optional hosting and maintenance retainer programs for ongoing core/theme/plugin updates, security monitoring, content edits, and emergency support. What this phase produces: a launched site that performs as designed, with the client equipped to manage it and the option for continuing support where the client wants that.

Who Hires Us

Who We Build Web Projects For

Web design and development serves an enormous range of business types and verticals. If your situation matches any of these, RMG’s discipline-specialized approach changes what your site can do:

  • Local service businesses needing local-search-optimized sites
  • Multi-location brands needing scalable site architecture
  • E-commerce brands needing online stores
  • Churches and faith-based ministries
  • Healthcare practices with ADA accessibility requirements
  • B2B companies needing lead-generation sites
  • Real estate brokerages and individual agents
  • Restaurants, hotels, and hospitality brands
  • Professional services firms (legal, accounting, consulting)
  • Nonprofits needing donation integration and event coverage
  • Marketing agencies needing white-label web design
  • Businesses with sites that haven’t been touched in 5+ years

If your last web project was sold as “generic web design” without honest discussion of which discipline actually fit your project — ended up on a proprietary platform you can’t leave — was farmed out to offshore developers you never met — doesn’t rank, doesn’t convert, or doesn’t hold up on mobile — the issue is almost always agencies that treat web design as one undifferentiated service instead of eight specialized disciplines. We work the other way: pick the discipline that fits, build with the right team and platform, and produce work that holds up commercially over years.

Our Difference

Why Choose RMG Web Marketing for Your Web Project?

The web design and development market splits along three unhelpful lines. Page-builder-only agencies use Elementor, Divi, Wix, or Squarespace exclusively, regardless of project fit, because the build is fast and profitable; the resulting sites often have reasonable performance ceilings, accessibility issues, and limited flexibility for custom functionality. Custom-code-only shops push every project into bespoke development at enterprise pricing, regardless of whether the project actually warrants it; a small local business that could have been served well by an AI-driven build at $6,000 instead pays $25,000 for over-engineered work, and a content edit post-launch becomes a billable developer ticket. Offshore farms deliver at low cost with no creative direction, no accountability, no meaningful project management, and code the client often can’t maintain when problems surface; the savings on the front end become exposure on the back end. Choosing RMG Web Marketing comes down to three things: eight specialized disciplines covering the full range of web work honestly priced, in-house design and development with the same accountable team across the project, and honest discipline recommendation that picks the approach that fits the project rather than the approach that maximizes our margin.

Based in Fairfield, Texas and serving clients across the country, we don’t pretend every project needs custom code. We don’t pretend every project fits Elementor. We don’t pretend AI-driven builds are appropriate for enterprise projects, and we don’t pretend fully-custom builds are right for small-business budgets. We pick the discipline that genuinely fits, quote it honestly, and build it with an accountable in-house team. Here’s what working with us looks like:

  • Eight specialized disciplines under one in-house studio
  • WordPress, Shopify, and custom-code per project fit
  • In-house design and development, no farmed-out work
  • WCAG 2.1 AA accessibility as a baseline, not an upcharge
  • SEO architecture baked in from day one, not bolted on
  • Mobile-first design with real-device performance testing
  • Honest discipline recommendation matched to project
  • Portable builds, not platform-locked rentals

We treat web design and development as a craft that requires real specialization, honest discipline matching, accountable in-house work, and portable builds the client actually owns — not a commodity service sold the same way regardless of project. The websites that hold up over years are the ones built that way from kickoff.

Start Your Web Project

Ready to Build the Right Website for Your Project?

Whether you already know which of our eight disciplines fits your project or you want a 30-minute consultation to figure that out, contact RMG Web Marketing today for a free, no-obligation quote with honest discipline recommendation, realistic budget range, and realistic timeline. We’ll tell you what your project actually needs, which discipline fits, and what working with us looks like — then you decide whether to move forward.

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