By that very analogy, using frameworks for building a service is absurd.
A framework you would use in order to pump out a ton of services quickly, just like a factory in this case. They'd be similar, with similar functionality and such, but you can produce them quickly and upgrade things across all of them fast. They wouldn't by optimal, but time from development to launch would be quicker.
But most startups and companies start with one web service, where at that point you don't really need a framework. What you need instead is careful deliberation and implementation, together with development speed and also enough proper architecture to continue to facilitate development speed in the future, but not too much as to over-engineer things. A balance if you will.
But unless your business/startup is about pumping out 100s of websites, a framework will hardly help you achieve your goal faster.
A framework you would use in order to pump out a ton of services quickly, just like a factory in this case. They'd be similar, with similar functionality and such, but you can produce them quickly and upgrade things across all of them fast. They wouldn't by optimal, but time from development to launch would be quicker.
But most startups and companies start with one web service, where at that point you don't really need a framework. What you need instead is careful deliberation and implementation, together with development speed and also enough proper architecture to continue to facilitate development speed in the future, but not too much as to over-engineer things. A balance if you will.
But unless your business/startup is about pumping out 100s of websites, a framework will hardly help you achieve your goal faster.