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Website FAQ

These are the practical questions most service businesses ask before they decide whether to launch or rebuild a site. The goal is clarity, not hype.

How much does a website cost?

The short answer is that it depends on scope. Cache Distribution uses a transparent pricing framework so service businesses can understand likely ranges before a call.

Smaller projects usually fit Starter or Growth. Broader builds with payments, ordering, or more complex operational needs tend to move into Pro or Custom scope.

Do I really need a website if I already have Google Business?

For most local businesses, yes. A profile on a third-party platform helps discovery, but it does not replace a website you control.

Your website is where you explain services, present proof, answer objections, and define the next step without depending entirely on another platform's layout or rules.

What should be on the site?

Most service business websites need a strong homepage, clear service details, an about or credibility section, contact information, and supporting proof such as reviews, galleries, or FAQs.

Some businesses also need scheduling, service-area coverage, estimate requests, menus, ordering paths, or payment-related features depending on how they operate.

Will the site rank on Google?

Sites launch with technical SEO basics in place, including semantic structure, metadata, sitemap coverage, and mobile-first layouts.

That is a foundation, not a guarantee. Rankings still depend on competition, geography, content quality, authority, and what happens after launch.

How long does a project take?

Template-based projects can move quickly once content, access, and approvals are in place. Fully custom work or integration-heavy builds take longer.

The biggest variable is usually decision speed: content collection, revision cycles, and who is responsible for approvals.

Do I own the site after launch?

Ownership and handoff should be defined in the project agreement, not assumed from marketing copy alone.

That agreement should cover hosting access, domains, source files, third-party accounts, and any limits tied to unpaid invoices or unfinished scope.

What should I bring to the first conversation?

A useful first call gets better when the business brings real constraints: the main services, the target service area, any current website or profile links, and the primary action the site should drive.

That information does not have to be perfect. It just needs to be concrete enough to distinguish a credibility rebuild from an operations-heavy project.

Next step

Need an answer specific to your business?

A useful answer depends on your actual offer, market, and process. If the question affects scope, it should be answered against a real brief.

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