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What the BoM Site Disaster Can Teach Small Businesses

BoM’s website revamp sparked backlash over cost and usability. Learn what its missteps reveal about website redesigns for Australian small businesses.


The Bureau of Meteorology’s website revamp left frustrated Australians feeling hotter under the collar than a scorching summer鈥檚 day. As BoM continues to weather community backlash, SMEs can learn valuable lessons about how to refresh their own webpages without a digital disaster.

The Bureau鈥檚 website redevelopment created a storm on two fronts: the $96.5 million – far higher than the $4.1 million initially communicated – and the usability of the site itself. Key features were moved or buried, navigation became confusing and, crucially, prolific users such as farmers and emergency services found essential data harder to access. Launched during a period of severe weather, the redesign required a rapid rollback of key elements, highlighting the risks of a redesign that falls short of delivering practical value.

The said the upgrade was essential because its previous, decade-old site was highly vulnerable to cyber attack, unstable under peak weather traffic and couldn鈥檛 reliably deliver data on mobile devices.

But experts say SMEs don鈥檛 always have clear goals in mind when designing or redesigning their websites, other than a desire for something new. Before rethinking a website鈥檚 look, the is to get crystal clear on why you鈥檙e doing it and whether you really need it.

Are you trying to boost lead generation, reduce customer support costs or drive more sales? SME owners are encouraged to set measurable targets – such as increasing form submissions by 15鈥痯er cent or reducing common customer support queries –  and make those the basis for the redesign roadmap. Existing data like analytics, heat maps and customer feedback can be used to prioritise which features best align with business outcomes. 

When thunderstorms were no longer showing up as red on the BoM radar, angry users saw red, and not because of a resistance to change. Farmers and emergency services, who relied on radar maps for safety and livelihoods, could no longer interpret the information.

The federal government鈥檚 Digital Experience says power users – customers and staff who depend most heavily on a site – should guide the redesign. 鈥淟earn about your users,鈥 it advises. 鈥淲atch how users do things now and what problems or barriers they face. This is called contextual qualitative research. It will help you to understand how the service you鈥檙e designing can meet user needs. Don鈥檛 rely on assumptions the business has made. It鈥檚 important to do your own research to understand the user journey.鈥

The advice is to audit your existing site to see which pages get the most traffic or highest engagement and don鈥檛 risk burying those in a push for a 鈥榝resh鈥 look. 

The BoM website faced complaints that users were forced to spend long periods searching for the information they needed.

Businesses want customers to spend time on their websites, but not if it鈥檚 spent fruitlessly searching, or waiting for a page to load. research shows that fast-loading sites are 2.5 to 3 times more likely to convert visitors into customers than slower ones. If forced to wait more than 3 seconds, the chance of buyers leaving a site increases by 32 per cent.

To put this into practice, the advice is to:

  • Make sure your site loads quickly on both desktop and mobile.
  • Keep the layout simple and easy to navigate so visitors can find what they need without effort.
  • Place calls to action like 鈥淕et a Quote,鈥 鈥淐ontact Us,鈥 or 鈥淏ook Now鈥 in obvious spots to guide users.

The day a new-look website goes live is not the end of the project for an SME: it鈥檚 Day 1, as its worth is measured. Owners are advised to where users drop off, which pages perform poorly and whether goals are being met. Regular reviews of visitor behaviour – bounce, or leaving, rates, return visits, navigation paths – will provide vital data, while Google Analytics can highlight performance trends.

In response to feedback, BoM has repealed some unpopular features, such as the radar map changes, and promised it鈥檚 still listening. “I totally accept the Australian public did not all get what they wanted from the initial release of the website,” BoM CEO Dr Stuart Minchin told the .

The Bureau鈥檚 experience shows that even well-resourced and well-meaning organisations can miss the mark when it comes to online communication. SMEs must keep customers鈥 needs front of mind to avoid their own flood of complaints.

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