Monday, August 3, 2009

Question for web developers?

when a small business hires someone to create a website for their business, does the business normaly also hire the person to manage it monthly as far as adding content and paying the monthly hosting. have no idea that once the site was made the developer just hands over the domain passwords and says "all done and pay this place every month". never was really sure how they worked that out.





If it makes any difference, i am just talking about a small local business that doesnt require much change in content on a monthly basis. maybe little but some.
Question for web developers?
If it does not require much change you can ask the web developer to provide you an interface (something simmilar to blogger.com) so that you can update your website yourself.


It may be better if you put your web project requirements clearly in freelance websites like http://getafreelnacer.com/ and let many web developers bid for your project and then you may hire whoever you like.
Question for web developers?
yes sir that is usually the way it works. email me at therealcamron@charter.net i can help you out if you need a website made. (yea i wanna get paid buddy. not much just depends on what you want me to do)
Reply:yes, you hire someone to design your site and pay them monthly for maintness and you web hosting
Reply:I think a better way is to make a contract saying that the developer will be available for a certain period of time, utmost 6 months to be available for small/minor changes at least twice a month. The best? get someone you know, pay him/her for the site, and i'm sure you won't have a hard time to call in a favor for some changes from time to time. well, that's what I would do in your place. ;) Goodluck!
Reply:This varies upon the developer, the small business hiring them, and many other factors.





The nice thing about web development as a career/industry, is it is extremely flexible.





When my company performs design and development services we work with the client to do what is best for them.





For clients who have little to no technical proficiency, I often find or provide hosting, design, development, and content updates.





For more tech saavy clients, I provide design and development and offer to host and update content.





Sometimes there's a middle ground where we do not host, but build (or implement) a content management system for the client, so they can easily make updates to the code without needing to know XHTML, CSS, or other programming.





It always depends on the clients needs, at least in my book, and any developer worth their salt should be able build or implement a content management system and give you control of your content, just expect to pay for it.





Also, I highly recommend keeping your domain names and hosting accounts in your name or your business' name. I've had clients in the past trust the wrong people, and we've had to go to court to get their domains/websites back.





Good luck!


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