Framed poster with inspirational quote “A dream is a higher desire for progress…”
A lot of people who want to start a web design business focus entirely on the design and development skills — and completely underestimate the business side. Having built and grown DAVIDCELESTIN.COM and the Studiolab from the ground up, I can tell you honestly: the design skills are maybe half the equation.
The skills question: do you need a degree?
You don’t need a formal web design degree to build a career in this field — plenty of successful designers and developers are self-taught or came up through bootcamps and hands-on project work. What you do need is a genuine, demonstrable portfolio and the ability to solve real client problems, not just build pretty mockups.
The business skills nobody tells you about
Pricing your work, managing client expectations, handling scope creep, invoicing, and simply finding your first clients are the things that actually determine whether a web design business survives its first two years. This is where my background outside of design — years spent in negotiation and structured problem-solving as a diplomat — turned out to be more useful than any technical course.
How to get your first web design clients
Cold outreach works better than most people expect if it’s specific and researched — showing a business exactly what’s wrong with their current site (and how you’d fix it) beats a generic pitch every time. Referrals from your very first few clients will do more for your business than any amount of paid advertising early on.
When it makes more sense to partner instead of going solo
Not everyone needs to build a full agency from scratch. If you already have client relationships — as a marketing consultant, freelancer, or small agency — but not the design and development capacity, white labeling is often the smarter path. We break this down fully in our guide to white label web design.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should I charge as a new web designer?
Pricing should reflect your actual skill level and portfolio, not an arbitrary number — research what comparable freelancers and agencies charge in your market and adjust as your portfolio grows.
Do I need to specialize in one industry or platform?
Specializing can help you stand out and market more effectively early on, though many designers broaden out once they’ve established a client base and reputation.


