Responsive Design
More than half of web traffic comes from phones, so we start every design at the smallest screen size and work upward. Your mobile experience is not a compressed version of a desktop layout, it is the primary design that everything else expands from.
See the three plans →Layouts begin at 375 pixels wide. Typography, spacing, content hierarchy, and navigation patterns are all resolved at phone scale before we design the tablet and desktop versions.
Your site does not jump between three fixed layouts. We use fluid grids and proportional spacing so the design adapts continuously from phones through ultrawide monitors.
Buttons, links, menu triggers, and form fields are sized and spaced for fingertip accuracy. Hover-dependent interactions are replaced with tap-friendly alternatives on touch devices.
We optimize image delivery, minimize render-blocking resources, and keep total page weight low so your site loads quickly on 4G and spotty connections, not just on office Wi-Fi.
The visual identity stays consistent, same colours, same typography, same brand feel. But the layout adapts to each screen size, so navigation might collapse into a menu icon on phones, images might stack vertically, and content sections reflow to maintain readability. It is the same site, presented appropriately for each device.
We test on real phones and tablets across iOS and Android in addition to browser-based device simulation. Every major breakpoint is checked during development, and we verify touch interactions, scroll behaviour, and load performance on actual hardware before launch.
Tablets get their own layout considerations. In portrait orientation they often follow a layout closer to the phone design, while landscape might shift toward the desktop structure. The fluid grid handles the transitions naturally, so tablet users get an experience that feels intentional.
Directly, yes. Google uses mobile-first indexing, which means it evaluates the mobile version of your site when determining rankings. A site that is genuinely designed for phones first rather than retroactively squeezed down from a desktop layout will perform better in those evaluations, particularly in Core Web Vitals metrics like layout shift and interaction responsiveness.