Looking ahead, Laurie Best is launching "Webeweb Static" —a service specifically for writers and artists who want a digital portfolio that will last 50 years without updates. Using plain HTML and static hosting, she is pushing back against the planned obsolescence of modern CMS platforms.
Laurie Best’s signature feature is the "Invisible Interface" methodology. Where other agencies add flashy animations, Webeweb strips away noise.
Rejecting the hustle-culture of SaaS, Laurie offers a 3-week deep immersion into a client’s existing traffic. She doesn’t look for viral spikes; she looks for drop-off cliffs—the exact point where a user gives up. Fixing that point is her specialty.
By Laurie Best
Hey there, web wanderers! Laurie Best here.
If you’ve been following the WeBe Web journey, you know that we are obsessed with one thing: helping you build a home on the internet that is alive. We talk a lot about design, we talk about SEO, and we definitely talk about the tech stack that holds it all together.
But today, I want to talk about the heart of your website. I want to talk about the people who are visiting it.
The internet is the most incredible library, marketplace, and meeting place in the history of the world. But there is a catch: not everyone gets to experience it the same way. For the over one billion people worldwide living with some form of disability, the web can often feel like a building with no ramp or a book with the pages glued shut.
In our latest WeBe Web episode, we dove deep into Accessibility (often called a11y), and I wanted to expand on that here. Because here is the truth: Accessibility is not a "nice-to-have" feature. It is a fundamental right.