Talking to a web designer can feel like a different language — domain, hosting, SSL, CMS, SEO. Most small business owners nod along and hope it doesn't matter much. The good news: it's simpler than it sounds, and understanding the basics helps you make better decisions and avoid being oversold things you don't need.
Here are the terms that come up most often, explained the way we'd explain them to a friend.
Domain
Your domain is your website's address — the part people type into a browser, like yourbusiness.com. You register it for a yearly fee, usually through whoever builds your site or a domain registrar directly. It's yours as long as you keep paying the small annual renewal.
If your website were a shop, the domain is the street address. Without it, customers have no way to find your door.
Hosting
Hosting is the storage space where your website's actual files — text, images, code — physically live so they can be shown to visitors. You rent this space from a hosting provider, paid monthly or yearly. Without hosting, your domain points to nothing.
The address — "123 Main Street." Tells people where to find you.
The actual building at that address. Where everything physically exists.
SSL / HTTPS
SSL stands for Secure Sockets Layer — it's the technology behind the small padlock icon you see in a browser's address bar, and the "https" (instead of plain "http") at the start of a web address. It encrypts the connection between a visitor and your website, protecting any data they enter, like a contact form.
Every website needs this today. Browsers actively warn visitors when a site doesn't have it, and Google treats unsecured sites as less trustworthy — which can hurt your search ranking, not just visitor confidence.
SEO (Search Engine Optimization)
SEO means structuring and writing your website so Google can understand what it's about and show it to people searching for related terms. It's not a magic trick — it's mostly about doing the basics correctly: using the words your customers actually type into Google, having fast-loading pages, clear headings, and a logical site structure.
No legitimate web designer can promise you'll rank "#1 on Google." Anyone who guarantees a specific ranking position is not being honest with you — good SEO improves your chances, it doesn't guarantee an outcome.
Responsive design
Responsive design means your website automatically adjusts its layout to fit whatever screen it's viewed on — a large desktop monitor, a tablet, or a small phone — without needing separate versions built for each. Since more than 60% of web traffic now comes from mobile devices, this isn't an optional extra; it's a baseline requirement for any new website.
CMS (Content Management System)
A CMS is software that lets you edit your website's text and images yourself, without writing code. WordPress is the most common example. It's useful if you want to make frequent changes — adding blog posts, updating prices, swapping photos — without contacting your designer each time.
It's not strictly necessary, though. Many small businesses are perfectly happy emailing their designer for occasional small changes instead of learning to manage a CMS themselves. Neither approach is wrong — it depends on how often you expect to update your site.
A few more terms, briefly
- Bounce rate: the percentage of visitors who leave after viewing just one page. High bounce rates can signal a page isn't matching what visitors expected.
- Meta description: the short snippet of text shown under your page title in Google search results — it doesn't directly affect ranking, but a good one improves your click-through rate.
- Sitemap: a file listing all your website's pages, submitted to Google so it can find and index everything properly.
- Above the fold: the part of a webpage visible before scrolling — the most important content should live here.
- Conversion: when a visitor takes the action you want — filling out a form, calling, or making a booking.
None of this needs to be memorized. The point of knowing these terms isn't to do the technical work yourself — it's to ask better questions and recognize when something is being explained honestly versus when you're being oversold.
Every package includes domain setup, hosting, SSL, basic SEO, and a responsive build by default — not as upsells. See exactly what's included in each package on our pricing page.
Quick answers
A domain is your website's address, like yourbusiness.com — it's what people type into a browser to find you. Hosting is the storage space where your website's actual files live, similar to renting a unit where your site is physically kept online. You need both: a domain to be found, and hosting to actually exist.
SSL stands for Secure Sockets Layer, the technology behind the padlock icon and "https" in a website's address. Yes, every website needs it — it encrypts data between the visitor and the site, and Google treats sites without SSL as less trustworthy, which can hurt both visitor confidence and search rankings.
SEO, or Search Engine Optimization, is the practice of structuring and writing a website so that Google can understand what it's about and show it to people searching for related terms. In simple terms, it means using the words your customers actually search for, having fast loading pages, and a clear, well-organized site structure.
Responsive design means a website automatically adjusts its layout to fit any screen size, from a large desktop monitor to a small phone screen, without separate versions needing to be built. Since over 60% of web traffic comes from mobile devices, responsive design is considered essential, not optional.
A CMS, or Content Management System, is software that lets you edit website text and images without coding knowledge — WordPress is a common example. It's useful if you want to make frequent changes yourself, but it's not strictly necessary if your designer handles small edits for you instead.
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Domain, hosting, SSL, and SEO are all handled for you — explained in plain language whenever you have a question.
