Improve and Iterate
Part of Create a Simple Website
Quick Summary
Your website does not need to be perfect when it first goes live. Launch it, then improve it over time.
Small, steady changes add up. Each update makes your site a bit better.
Start with a simple version
Launch your first version even if it feels basic. A live site is better than a perfect one that never ships.
You can add more features, polish the design, and refine the content later. The important thing is to get it out there.
Improve one thing at a time
Do not try to change everything at once. Pick one improvement—better text, a clearer layout, or a new section—and do it.
Then test it, deploy it, and move on to the next. This keeps things manageable and reduces the chance of breaking things.
Use AI to improve faster
Ask Cursor to help with improvements. For example: "Make the contact form more readable" or "Add a section for my latest project."
AI can suggest changes, write code, and speed up the work. You decide what to keep and what to change.
Learn from real usage
Once people visit your site, you notice what works and what does not. Maybe a page is confusing, or a button is hard to find.
Use that feedback to guide your next improvements. Real usage teaches you more than guessing.
Simple improvement cycle
Build something, launch it, watch how people use it, make improvements, and repeat. This cycle keeps your site moving forward.
Progress matters more than perfection
Do not wait until everything is perfect. A site that improves over time is better than one that never launches.
Keep moving forward. Each small step counts.