Back to Blog
4 min read

What happens after Webspansion builds your website

A clean workspace with notes and a laptop, representing the handoff and next steps after a website is delivered

Most people think about the website. The design, the copy, the deadline. What they don't think about much is what happens the day after it goes live. That's where expectations can fall apart, so I want to spell it out clearly.

What you actually get

When I finish a Webspansion project, you get a live, working website at your domain. It's built in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript — no CMS, no login portal, no monthly platform subscription required. It loads fast, it's mobile-friendly, and it's built to last without constant upkeep.

The files belong to you. If you ever want to move hosts, hand things off to a developer, or make changes yourself, you can. The code isn't locked into a proprietary builder that disappears if the company folds.

What I do after launch

If something is broken — a broken link, a layout issue on a specific device, a form that doesn't submit — I want to know about it, and I'll fix it. That applies especially in the first week or two after launch, when most issues surface.

What I'm not is a maintenance plan. I'm one person running a free project alongside school. I can't guarantee same-day responses, ongoing redesigns, or monthly content updates. If you need that level of ongoing support, you'll need a professional agency or a retainer arrangement with a web developer.

What you're responsible for

A few things stay in your hands after delivery.

Your domain. If you have a custom domain, you're paying for it through a registrar like GoDaddy, Namecheap, or Google Domains. That renewal is your responsibility. If it lapses, your site goes down. I can't help with that.

Your content. If your hours change, you move locations, add a new service, or want to update your About page, those are content updates. Send them to me at help@getwebspansion.org and I'll get to them when I can. Small text edits are generally fine. Major restructuring is a different conversation.

Your Google Business Profile. A website helps with search, but for local businesses, your Google Business Profile is equally important. That's something you manage directly through Google. If you haven't claimed yours, do that.

When things change significantly

If your business changes enough that the website no longer makes sense — you pivot, you rename, you add an entirely new service line — that might be a rebuild conversation, not a small update. I'll be honest about that when it comes up. Some changes are worth absorbing; others are effectively a new project.

It helps to think of the website I deliver as a solid starting point, not a finished product that never needs to change. The best websites get refined over time. The starting point just has to be better than nothing, and genuinely good at what it does on day one.

The honest version of what Webspansion is

I build your website well. I launch it. I catch and fix early issues. Beyond that, the relationship is more limited than what you'd get from a paid agency or a retainer developer. That's the honest trade-off of a free program run by a college student.

If that sounds like a fair deal, apply here. If you want to know more about what the program includes before you decide, read what Webspansion is and what it isn't or check the what to expect page.

Related posts

What Webspansion is and what it isn't
Why I build free websites
What to prepare before getting a website built

Ready to apply?

Webspansion builds free, AI-assisted websites for qualifying small businesses and community organizations. Apply and I'll be upfront about whether your project is a good fit.

Apply Free What to expect