When it comes to your website, your digital partner might talk a big game—mobile-first design, SEO-friendly, and clean, modern visuals—but behind the buzzwords, how do you know you’re getting what you really need?
As a small business owner, you don’t need to speak fluent HTML to ask smart questions. In fact, asking the right questions can reveal whether your website partner is focused on real results—or just surface-level deliverables.
Here are 10 questions that many agencies (and even DIY platforms) hope you won’t ask—but absolutely should.
1. Who actually owns my website and domain name?
If your agency bought the domain or controls the hosting account, they might hold the keys to your entire digital presence. You should always own your domain and have access to your hosting—even if someone else manages it for you.
Why it matters: Ownership = control. Without it, you could be locked out of your own website. DIY users should register their own domain and ensure hosting is under their name.


2. What happens if we part ways—will I still have full access to everything?
Some agencies build on proprietary platforms or use locked-down templates that aren’t easily transferable. Ask what’s portable (site files, content, images, code) and what’s not. A good partner builds with you in mind—not vendor lock-in.
Why it matters: You need to know what you own and can take with you. DIY site builders should review platform export options and portability.
3. Can I see a breakdown of what I’m paying for each month?
Many agencies bundle services into one monthly invoice, making it hard to know what’s design, what’s hosting, what’s “maintenance.” Insist on a transparent breakdown. If they hesitate, it’s worth pressing.
Why it matters: Transparency reveals if you’re overpaying for routine services. DIY users should track hosting, domain, and add-on fees separately.


4. How will I measure whether this website is working?
“Looks great” doesn’t pay the bills. Ask how they’ll track success: traffic growth, conversions, bounce rate, or local SEO rankings. If they can’t explain how the site will impact your bottom line, they’re focused on style—not strategy. Design should be driven by user experience—not just aesthetics.
Why it matters: Design is subjective—data isn’t. DIY users should connect to Google Analytics or use built-in platform analytics to ensure they can monitor performance and improve user journeys.
5. Will I be able to update the content myself?
You shouldn’t have to call your agency (or pay them) every time you need to change a phone number or update your hours. Make sure your site includes a user-friendly content management system (CMS) and basic training.
Follow-up question: What training or documentation will you provide to help me manage the site after launch?
Why it matters: Empowering you saves time and money. DIY platforms like Wix or Squarespace are CMS-based—use them to their fullest, but don’t assume ease of use replaces the need for guidance.


6. Is this site built for search engines—or just humans?
A beautiful website is useless if no one finds it. Ask about basic SEO best practices: proper page titles, metadata, mobile optimization, internal linking, alt text, and schema markup. If they dodge the topic, it’s a red flag.
Why it matters: A site needs both style and structure. DIY users should ensure each page includes SEO settings and checklists.
7. Is my site accessible to all users, including those with disabilities?
Accessibility matters. Can users with visual or physical impairments use your site effectively? Ask whether your site meets ADA or WCAG compliance standards.
Follow-up questions: What are you going to do to ensure site compliance going forward? What happens if I get a lawsuit because of your design? Are you also addressing other compliance laws like GDPR and CCPA?
Why it matters: Compliance isn’t just about accessibility—it also includes data privacy and security. Between ADA, GDPR, CCPA, and other regulations, your website must meet a growing list of legal expectations. If your agency can’t articulate how compliance is monitored and maintained—or where liability falls—they may be putting your business at risk.


8. What are you doing to protect my site from being hacked?
Security isn’t just for big businesses. Your partner should be implementing SSL certificates, regular software updates, backups, and other security best practices. If their response is vague, your risk is real.
Why it matters: Hacks don’t just damage trust—they cost money. DIY users should activate SSL, update plugins, and enable backups.
9. What kind of support do you provide after launch?
Does your partner disappear after the site goes live? Or will they offer training, updates, and performance reviews? A website isn’t a one-and-done deal—it’s a living asset that needs attention.
Why it matters: A neglected site can quickly break down. DIY users should understand what post-launch resources (like chat support or training videos) are available.


10. How will you help me scale my website as my business grows?
Your website should grow and evolve as your business and the marketplace does—whether that means adding new tools, expanding features, or supporting higher traffic.
Follow-up question: Is the platform flexible enough to grow with me—or will I need to start from scratch?
Why it matters: If your platform isn’t flexible, you could outgrow it quickly or face costly rebuilds. DIY users should look for scalable tools and hosting.
Final Thoughts: If They Squirm, You’re Onto Something
You deserve a digital partner who works with you, not one who hides behind jargon or fine print. Asking these tough questions isn’t about being difficult—it’s about protecting your business, your brand, and your budget.
Want a second opinion on your website setup or partner contract?
Contact KeyBuzz Digital for a free consultation. Let’s make sure your website works for you—not the other way around.