7 FAQs About Web Development Made Simple

Published: Feb. 4, 2015, 5:19 p.m.

b'It seemed last year many of our readers had the same questions about websites that kept coming up. So for convenience\'s sake, we\'ve compiled them neatly right here. Take a look and see if one of your questions topped our list of FAQs:
\\n1. Why Does It Cost So Much?
\\nThis most frequently asked question opens the golden gate of opportunity for us to explain precisely what the value of your website is. In a previous article on the cost of a website, I likened your website to an employee for your business. Your company\'s website is working for you 24/7, without ever needing a break. It sells for you while you\'re sleeping, and it\'s a constant advertisement/promoter/educator for your products and services.
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\\nSo if you paid $20,000 for your website, that means after 2 years you have paid your website "employee" $10,000 per year. That\'s an hourly wage of $1.14! Whatever the cost of your company website (and you should expect it to be at least $15k if working with an agency), you can be sure that it will quickly pay for itself and its value greatly outweighs the initial cost.
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\\nWant further insight on what other agencies charge? Let a global digital agency expert, Karl Sakas, give you his weigh-in.
\\n2. Can\'t You Just Build on the Website I Already Have?
\\nDo I Need to Start From Scratch? I hate this question because no matter how thoroughly we explain why a prospect\'s current website isn\'t usable, many clients still come away feeling slighted as if dealing with sleazy auto mechanics pushing to sell them a manual clutch for their automatic car. I addressed this issue in Before You Hire a Web Developer as a caution to clients.
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\\nJust like you need the keys and title to a car before you can make any changes to it, your web agency\\xa0also requires a few things in order to touch your website:
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\\n \\t* FTP / SFTP Access
\\n \\t* Admin Log in Credentials
\\n \\t* Proof Of Domain Ownership
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\\nIf you rent or lease your site, we do not have the legal right to make changes to it and therefore need to build a new website from the ground, up. Also, if it\'s been coded in a custom framework such as a privately licensed shopping cart, it\'s on lock down. Try translating Japanese into English after only taking a year\'s worth of education in that foreign language. That\'s why we use and recommend open source code (like WordPress).
\\n3. Why Should I Switch to WordPress?
\\nOur favorite reason? No monthly on going maintenance fee to install and run it on your website. WordPress has become the world\'s most popular content management system (CMS), with over 24% of websites powered by it. That means naturally there are more themes, plug-ins and tech support than any other CMS out there.
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\\nIt\'s also the most user friendly. More and more entrepreneurs want to learn how to maintain their own website, and there\'s no better platform than WordPress. It\'s intuitive, simple and many features require little to no coding. We could go on and on, but I suggest you\\xa0read the following article on how your business can use WordPress.
\\n4. Isn\'t There a Plug-in for That?
\\nAs easy as that would make our job, the answer is not always, "Yes." Even with thousands of plug-in options that exist for WordPress, a lot of times a client needs a custom function that an already existing plug-in w...'