---
title: Web Jargon Part Two
date: 2019-08-27T05:30:00-04:00
author: Sean Smith
canonical_url: "https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-6/web-jargon-part-two/"
section: Podcast
---
&lt;!\[CDATA\[YII-BLOCK-BODY-BEGIN\]\]&gt;[Skip to main content](#main-content)Season 02 Episode 6 – Aug 27, 2019   
33:27 [Show Notes](#show-notes)

## Web Jargon Part Two

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In this second episode on web jargon Sean and Mike explain web terminology that every website owner should be familiar with. This will help when working with a developer or when DIY your website.

<a name="show-notes"></a>### Show Notes

Jargon that we explain include:

- HTML, CSS, Javascript
- Theme
- User testing / usability testing
- CTA / Call to Action
- Conversion
- favicon
- Cache / cache busting
- wireframe / mockup
- Discovery
- Above the fold
- Cookie
- Remarketing
- GDPR
- The Cloud / Cloud based
- SEO / Search Engine Optimization
- 404, 301, 500 Error Pages
- URL
- 

### Show Links

- [Web Jargon Part One - season 2 episode 5](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-5/web-jargon-part-one/)
- [Theme Forest](https://themeforest.net/)
- [Above the Fold - Sean's blog post](https://caffeinecreations.ca/blog/above-the-fold-why-the-fold-is-irrelavant/)
- [I Am The Fold](https://iamthefold.com/)
- [SEO 101 - season 1 episode 5](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-01/episode-5/seo-101/)
- [GDPR - wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation)

Powered Transcript Accuracy of transcript is dependant on AI technology.

**\[00:00\]** **Mike:** Hello, and welcome back to the website 101 Podcast. I'm your co-host Mike Mella, and with me, as always, is my other co-host, Sean Smith. Sean, how's it going?

**\[00:10\]** **Sean:** Hey, it's good. Glad to be back for part two of web developer, jargon, and terminology.

**\[00:18\]** **Mike:** Yeah, that's right. Last time we started this topic, and we got through so many that we figured we should break it up into a two episode sort of series. And that's what we're doing today. There's the second part. So be sure to check out the earlier episode that has a whole bunch of other tips, or not tips, sorry.

**\[00:39\]** **Sean:** Which will include in the show notes, just in case you haven't listened to it.

**\[00:42\]** **Mike:** Yeah, right, right.

**\[00:44\]** **Sean:** All right, so the first thing we're, the terms that we're gonna talk about this episode are a little bit more less important than the ones from last episode, but they're still very useful and very important, and let's start it off by talking about three terms all at once. HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. So these are three different languages that are the foundation of basically all websites. So yeah, that's right.

**\[01:17\]** **Mike:** These are kind of like, you could say these are the language that websites are made up out of. This is the code that's in the background of a website is, when you break it right down, of course, there's a whole bunch of other types of coding that could be involved, but when you break it down, it's really those three that make up the average website.

**\[01:36\]** **Sean:** Yeah, I mean, those are the most, without those, you can't have a website. Other web, some websites will, a lot, will require things like PHP, or subsets of that, something like React, which is a type of, or a flavor of JavaScript. And these are terms that you might hear. But at the most basic foundational level HTML, CSS, and JavaScript are what your websites are made of

**\[02:05\]** **Mike:** and run by. Yeah, HTML would be the, handle the content of your site generally, like so the actual text and imagery and so on. CSS is how it's displayed and how it looks and JavaScript is the behavior. So that would be, you know, when you click things and things happen that's often handled by JavaScript.

**\[02:27\]** **Sean:** Right, and HTML and CSS are both initialisms, not acronyms and acronyms. Something that you can say and initialism is letters that stand for the first letter about something else such as HTML, hypertext, markup, language. CSS is cascading style sheets. Right. A little side note, an acronym would be something like NASA, where you have your initials but you can actually say it as a word.

**\[03:01\]** **Mike:** I'm so glad you pointed that out. It drives me crazy when people interchange those terms.

**\[03:05\]** **Sean:** I know it shouldn't because who cares, but it's very pedantic, but hey, I'm a pedant, so that's right. But related to HTML, CSS, and JavaScript is a theme, and most people will be familiar with something like WordPress, which is a theme-based CMS, CMS being a term that we talked about last week.

**\[03:30\]** **Mike:** Right. Yeah, a theme you could describe as the design of your site overall. So as Sean mentioned, WordPress often uses, well, it has to use themes, doesn't it? Yeah.

**\[03:44\]** **Sean:** themes. Right, so you can purchase a theme and you just upload your theme to your WordPress site, click a couple of buttons and boom your site looks like it is. Yeah, so you could even

**\[03:59\]** **Mike:** install a different theme and then sort of flip the switch and all of sudden all of your content is still there. You know, maybe some imagery is still there but it's all presented in a completely different design because you've switched the theme to something else. So that's how WordPress and CMS is like that, handle their themes.

**\[04:17\]** **Sean:** Right. But themes can also be just an HTML CSS theme, which is something that you can purchase from a website like Theme Forest, where you also get WordPress themes. But an HTML CSS theme will have just HTML, CSS, and JavaScript files. And then you would need to put in the CMS tags for your specific CMS, whether that's craft CMS, expression engine, Jumla, or Statamic, or whatever CMS that you're using.

**\[04:56\]** **Mike:** Yeah. So though, and this is a way, like if you have a small budget, then maybe you can't afford a designer or maybe you're building a site yourself and you're not a designer, whatever. Getting a theme is a great way to sort of get your site up there looking nice without breaking the bank on hiring a designer to make a custom design.

**\[05:18\]** **Sean:** Exactly. Actually, one of my photographer clients is we're going to be redoing his look of his site, but he's a little bit tight on his budget. So he's actually going to be purchasing an HTML theme from a theme forest. And then I will be taking that and putting it into expression engine, which he already hasn't it? Expression and gym powered site. Great. Okay. Yeah. So should we move on to the next term? Yeah. I think my user testing seems to be a little bit more of your forte than mine. So

**\[05:50\]** **Mike:** why don't you talk about that? Yeah. User testing or usability testing is something we've mentioned in a few of previous episodes as well. But the general idea is when you are building your site, you need to make sure that it's working, in the sense that it's actually allowing your visitors to do the thing that they want to be able to do through this site.

So the idea with user testing is you sit someone down in front of your website, even if it's not complete yet. In fact, people recommend that you do that earlier on, the earlier the better so that you can make changes based on the results. But you watch someone using your website and you give them a few tasks that you, as the website owner want them to be able to accomplish like you know how do you find the donate button or contact us or find this staff member or whatever and they click around and if they have trouble doing it then you obviously need to make adjustments to your site. So that's basically what user testing is about.

**\[06:46\]** **Sean:** Yeah, it sounds like something that would be very helpful for you in ensuring that your site operates and does well and related to that you want to find part of your user testing is helping or determining whether your users can find your call to actions and get conversions. So that brings us to our next term, CTA or call to action.

Another initialism, not an acronym. Exactly. So a CTA or call to action is a big, quite often it's a big button on your site saying something like enroll now, buy now, learn more, volunteer, volunteer. Yeah, so it's directing your users to do something that you want them to do. It's helping them to find useful parts of your website.

**\[07:46\]** **Mike:** of your website. Right. And the other side of that would be the conversions, which is conversions This is a term I guess people use in web development that basically means the action that has to happen in order for you as the website owner to get some measure of success from your website. So if you're trying to sell widgets or whatever, then when someone buys a widget that could be countered as a conversion. If you're a nonprofit and you're trying to spread awareness for your organization or your campaign, maybe when someone shares that on social media, maybe that counts as a conversion. So the call to actions drive people toward the conversions, right?

**\[08:30\]** **Sean:** Right. So for example, a call to action on our podcast site would be like subscribe to the podcast in your favorite podcast player, whether that's iTunes or whatever, Stitcher, whatever it is. sort of. So Mike, what is a, what is a Favicon?

**\[08:53\]** **Mike:** Yeah, Favicon. This is another one that, I mean, it's not terribly important for people to know when they're building site, but for a website owner to know, but you might encounter this term here and there. When you're visiting a website, in the URL, in the address bar, where you're addressed to your website is my website.com, whatever. Very often you see a little icon to the left of it that sort of is the logo very often of that company organization.

It's some little graphic that's very small and it sort of lets you visually identify that website at a glance and if you were to bookmark that site in your browser so that you can come back to it again and again, it would retain that little icon as well and that icon is called a favicon.

**\[09:43\]** **Sean:** And so if you take a look at the podcast website, there's a little microphone as the Favicon.

**\[09:50\]** **Mike:** I think Favicon comes from, it was in an explorer, that started it and it was favorites as what they called their bookmarks. So it's favorite icon. Yeah, pretty much.

**\[09:59\]** **Sean:** Pretty much. And so Favicons are also used for things like apps on your phone. So when a developer creates a Favicon, he adds a whole bunch of different codes that tells your iPhone or your tablet or whatever are different sizes and sources for the various icons that are usually all look the same but they need to be slightly different shapes and sizes.

**\[10:24\]** **Mike:** Yeah, so when you're, that's right, that's a good point. When you're looking at your phone, that's an even more common representation of a favicon I realize, I guess, the icons that you touch to open up to launch an app or a website, those could be considered favocons.

**\[10:40\]** **Sean:** So, our next term is a little bit more technical and is often something I need to explain to clients when I'm doing work on a site and I say, oh, can you check this out and let me know if it's approved or we can go forward and they come back and say, I don't see the change or it's broken. Often this means that they need to clear their cache. And so our term for this is cache. And there's a couple of different types of cache, but the most common one is clearing your browser cache. And so basically what cache is is a bunch of little files that your browser downloads, and it knows are already there. So it doesn't need to download it again. It helps to speed up your site. Things like this could be your CSS file, your JavaScript, various images on the site. And the quickest way to clear your browser cache is Control

**\[11:42\]** **Mike:** and F5. Yeah, I get it. Just going through that in my head, Control, F5. Yeah, I think that is it.

**\[11:50\]** **Sean:** Absolutely it is. But there are other types of cache that you may need to clear on occasion and that could be your entire website cache. It could be your computer's DNS and that's actually very technical, but typically your developer would direct you to give you directions and instructions on how to do that.

**\[12:15\]** **Mike:** Yeah, and so the cache is kind of, your browser's memory of the website. So if it knows, yeah, like as you said, if it's loading say a JavaScript file that makes certain things happen when you click around, it doesn't necessarily need to load that whole file again the next time you visit the site so it keeps it in its cache memory. And by the way, great developers and great CMSs and so on allow you to add something called a cash buster to the code, which is basically a way to force that file to reload every time you visit the website. And certain circumstances you might want to implement something like that, not you, the website owner, but you have your developer do it so that you don't have that issue of people visiting your site and not seeing the new item. If you're running like a news site where you need the articles to be updated very quickly and promptly, you might want to implement something like a cash buster.

**\[13:20\]** **Sean:** And a cash buster can even be something in your CMS because a lot of times your CMS will be caching the entire template. But you want to bust the cash when you update or write a new entry so that the template is no longer cash, and the first viewer gets to see the new content, and at that point it gets cashed. Until the next time, you update or write a new entry. Hi, I hope you're enjoying this episode. You know, we'd really love to hear from our listeners about suggestions for topics in the future. If you have any topic suggestions, please let us know.

**\[13:59\]** **Mike:** Yeah, and if you have any guest suggestions, we'd also like to know those. If there are anyone you'd like us to have on the show and interview. Is there anyone we've had on the show that you'd like to have back and talk some more? Let us know. You can visit website 101podcast.com slash contact to get in touch with it.

**\[14:21\]** **Sean:** So, Mike, could you tell us about what a wireframe or mock-up is?

**\[14:28\]** **Mike:** Yeah, wireframe. This is something that's generally used in the design sort of phase of web development. And the idea, at least this is how I frequently use wireframes, is before you start to really flesh out the design of a website with all kinds of colors and logos and images and things like that, you just literally make a wireframe just like it sounds like a design of the site that's made up of a series of boxes that has no color, no shading or shadows or anything like that, and it just identifies where in the site everything will be within the context of everything else.

**\[15:11\]** **Sean:** So, it's really a minimal approach, kind of like what you would sketch on a piece of paper when you're talking about it, although a little bit more technical than that, but.

**\[15:21\]** **Mike:** Well, that's glad you mentioned that because people have designers have different techniques that they use to achieve this. Some of them really do draw things on paper and just scan them into the computer and email them to your client, to the client and say, what do you think of this? Other people use software that allows them to sort of draw these boxes, Photoshop, that kind of thing. But yeah, the idea is to show the client, okay, this is where things are going to be, how big various elements are going to be on the page, but don't focus on content or colors or anything like that at this point. That's kind of what it is.

**\[15:54\]** **Sean:** All right. Well, you addressed wireframe. Is there a difference between a wireframe and a mockup?

**\[16:00\]** **Mike:** Yeah, for me, I would say mock-up would be the next step after wireframe. So once you've established how things are going to look relative to each other in size and that kind of thing, then you go into more design-y stuff where you actually implement a color palette font typography, that kind of thing, and you sort of sketch it up not permanently but sort of toward the goal of having an actual design, and that would be your mock-up. So this is just an example of where we could go with this. That's how I use the term mockup.

**\[16:35\]** **Sean:** Okay. So I'm gonna jump ahead a little bit and let's talk about discovery because discovery is somewhat related to your design process, wireframe and mockup, but it comes at the beginning of the process.

**\[16:50\]** **Mike:** Right, right.

**\[16:51\]** **Sean:** So a lot of times the discovery will be something where your developer or your web agency has a couple of meetings with you or phone calls and they ask a lot of questions to learn about your business, your project, the goals for your business and the website and discovery might also involve spending a little bit of time poking around your existing website to see how it operates and whether they can use parts of it in the new website or the new version of it. Is there anything else you would add to that, Mike?

**\[17:31\]** **Mike:** Yeah, just that discovery is, it's a really necessary step when you're starting a brand new project because it can reveal all kinds of things that are very important to know that you might not have known at the outset. So like, during a discovery phase, you might find out that, you know, we want a whole bunch of icons representing the different programs that we do. And then during the discovery phase, I might ask, do you have these icons? And maybe the answer is no. And do you have a graphic designer that's going to develop these icons? And maybe the answer to that is no. And then all of a sudden, there's this other phase involved where we need to actually develop iconography for this project that we didn't know at the beginning.

**\[18:19\]** **Sean:** and that could involve custom icons, purchasing a set, or even finding some free icons that fit the style of the website and the business.

**\[18:30\]** **Mike:** Right, but anything like that needs to be discovered at the beginning of the project, so that you know exactly where you're headed, and that's that happens in the discovery phase.

**\[18:40\]** **Sean:** I see what you did there with discovered.

**\[18:42\]** **Mike:** That was actually well played. Okay, so above the fold, Another term that, yeah, aside from what was the other one, clear your cache. Above the fold is something that comes up all the time in web development.

**\[18:59\]** **Sean:** Sean, tell us what that's about. Above the fold is what's the fold? What's the fold? I was going to just hit that. Above the fold is a term that goes back to newspaper days. So when you buy your newspaper out, the newspaper stand, It's folded in half and the most important headline of the day is on the top of the page. It's what you see first. So initially back in the early 2000s and late 90s when websites were billed above the fold referred to what you could see when you first visited the page. Since around 2010, 2011, this term is no longer really a viable term because the different sizes of devices that people visit websites on. That could be your phone, a tablet, a laptop, a larger laptop, a desktop, different size monitors. Right now, I'm looking at a 34-inch ultra-wide and then I have a second monitor, which is a 4K monitor set and portrait. Above the fold compared to my phone I can see like there is no fold. Right. Right. And I know that both you myself and I have both written articles on our blogs about above the fold, which will link to both of them. Yes. Yeah. So the point

**\[20:31\]** **Mike:** with all this device, the landscape of different devices that people have now phones and tablets and everything else is that you can never estimate how much of the content they're going to see at a glance when they first arrive there because you don't, well, you could find out how large their screen is, but you can't design for every single case.

**\[20:54\]** **Sean:** Exactly. And in the season one episode that we recorded together, you mentioned a specific website, which I can't recall off the top of my mind, do you remember it?

**\[21:03\]** **Mike:** I believe it was iamthefold.com.

**\[21:08\]** **Sean:** Okay, I'm going to Google that right now as we record. I am the fold.com. Is that the one? This is the site. We'll include this in the show notes. You can visit this site and it will give you dimensions of various devices that have visited the site recently. So I just visited it on my 4K portrait monitor and the fold is showing as 2,032 pixels.

**\[21:38\]** **Mike:** Right, so every time someone visits this site, it tracks the bottom of their screen like where it is. So if you then visit it and your screen is larger, you'll see this little red line or not a red line, a gray line indicating where that person's the bottom of the screen was and where the fold was for that person. And of course, as you can imagine, people keep visiting the site and the screen is just filled with lines because there's folds, you know, everyone's fold is different, right?

**\[22:04\]** **Sean:** Yeah, it's, it's a really interesting idea. Um, okay, so let's hop on to the next term cookies. What, what is a cookie? I mean, I, I, I like to eat Oreos. What does that have to do with the websites?

**\[22:18\]** **Mike:** Yeah. So cookie is, I guess it's sort of in the realm of cash, like what we talked about earlier. A cookie is a small file that gets saved to your machine or your device whenever you visit a website. And that cookie, it can't run all kinds of programs or anything like that, but it stores information about various things. So for example, it might store, well, let's give me some examples, Sean, it might store where you're located in terms of where your IP address is coming from, it'll also store

**\[22:56\]** **Sean:** things like your username and the fact that you've logged into a website.

**\[23:02\]** **Mike:** When the last time you visited the website, it could store that kind of thing.

**\[23:06\]** **Sean:** Cookies are one of those things that when you visit Amazon.com and then later in the day you're going on to Facebook, you see an ad for the product that you've viewed. That comes because Amazon set a cookie and tied it into your Facebook ID. Yeah, don't ask me how they do it. It's really complicated. But yes, they do that.

**\[23:29\]** **Mike:** Well, the truth is, in most cases, it's called remarketing. What's that? It's called remarketing. Oh yeah, right. Did you do an episode on that in an

**\[23:40\]** **Sean:** earlier season? In season one, we talked about SEO with Luke Stevens. Right. And we talked

**\[23:47\]** **Mike:** about remarketing there as well. Right. Okay. So in your general sort of browsing of the web, cookies are not very, like they're pretty innocuous. Like they help you, I mean, maybe if you don't want to see an ad for the thing, you just looked out at Amazon, that could be annoying. But other than that, it really doesn't interfere with your browsing activity very much. Although it can help. It can help. Yeah. And now, but in Europe, now they have this new law, right? The GDPR was it called? Yes. And you know what? We should have

**\[24:21\]** **Sean:** Googled that before the episode because I don't even know what GDPR means. Let me see if I can

**\[24:26\]** **Mike:** remember. I'm like, I'm like, I'm gonna Google it. Go ahead and Google it. I'll start talking. You keep talking. Basically the GDPR is a law that came into place in Europe, I believe it was. where honestly a lot of people politicians who maybe aren't that familiar with how the web works assume that cookies were dangerous and invasion of privacy. And they made a law that says that now any site that does business with anyone in Europe needs to be able to explicitly say that they are storing cookies on that person's machine about them whether the last time they were were there and so on. And that person needs to authorize the cookies. So you might have seen this, even there are sites here in North America and so on that do it. It's kind of becoming commonplace where you go to the site and it says, this site uses cookies. Is that OK? And you click OK or no, and it will change your experience depending on what you select. It's kind of annoying to be honest with you.

**\[25:25\]** **Sean:** Yeah, so GDPR was not one of our planned terms, but we're going to talk about it. And I'm going to include a link to the Wikipedia article, but for the record, GDPR stands for general data protection regulation. And it's basically it's an EU law that requires websites to allow users to opt out or opt in. I don't know the exact details about sharing their data via cookies.

**\[26:01\]** **Mike:** Right. And if you do, like I say, if you do any business with anyone in the European Union, you might want to consider adding one of those little permission things. Or you might want to just add it anyway, because it's going to come worldwide anyways.

**\[26:17\]** **Sean:** I'm sure in the next two to three years, you're going to see similar things in the United States, in Canada, in New York, Asian countries as well, probably. So let's move on to the cloud and cloud based. And I believe Mike's the right guy to talk about this. Yeah, this is just a client about it recently.

**\[26:38\]** **Mike:** Yeah, I had a client recently asked me is our website cloud based. I mean, when you hear the cloud is sort of a, what is like a trendy kind of pop term that you hear a lot of these days that something's cloud based or it's in the cloud, there's a lot of technical side to what it means from a web developer standpoint, but as far as the average website owner is concerned, I would say the cloud basically means the internet. So your website is in the cloud in the sense that it's hosted somewhere and you travel through the internet to use that website, you know, you have to access it through the internet and so on. That's a cloud.

**\[27:16\]** **Sean:** If it's cloud-based, it's accessible from anywhere that you have an internet connection. That's basically what it means.

**\[27:22\]** **Mike:** Yeah, so I don't think most website owners need to really be concerned with the cloud versus other forms of website management that are not cloud-based, which that might even be above my pay grade.

**\[27:36\]** **Sean:** Pretty much. Okay, so the next term we have listed here is SEO, and we really touched briefly on it just a second ago, SEO Search Engine Optimization. There's a whole other episode in season one called SEO, and I had a guest Luke Stevens talk about it. informative, very useful. I'm going to refer you back to that one for more details on that.

**\[28:00\]** **Mike:** Yeah. Great. So finally, do you want to talk about various types of error pages that you might

**\[28:07\]** **Sean:** see? Sure. So the last term that we have are 404, 301 and 500 error pages. There are many, many, many types of error pages, but these are the four errors that you need to be aware of. 404 being page not found. So a lot of times when you visit a website if you mistype the URL or they deleted a page or whatever you end up on a page, it says 404 error and they give you maybe a link to the site map or a search or whatever. Basically the page that you've the URL that you hit no longer exists, maybe it's a typo, maybe it was deleted. A 301 is a 301 redirect. And that could be that our URL used to be slash privacy, but now we've changed it to privacy and legal. So slash privacy dash legal. And so your web developer or your CMS might have a plugin that lets you redirect it, you tell the browser, if you go to slash privacy, now you're going to go slash privacy dash legal or whatever changes to the URL that you've made.

**\[29:28\]** **Mike:** Sean, what about GDPR? Above the fold is a term that goes back to newspaper days. So when you buy your newspaper out of a newspaper stand, it's folded in half and the most important headline of the day is on the top of the page. It's what you see first. Initially back in the early 2000s and late 90s when websites were billed above the fold referred to what you could see when you first visited the page. Since around 2010, 2011, this term is no longer really a viable term because the different sizes of devices that people visit websites on. That could be your phone, a tablet, a laptop, a larger laptop, a desktop, different size monitors. Right now, I'm looking at a 34-inch ultra-wide and then I have a second monitor, which is a 4K monitor set and portrait. Above the fold compared to my phone I can see like there is no fold.

Today, with responsive web design, websites are designed to adapt to the size of the screen they're being viewed on, so the concept of above the fold is less relevant than it used to be. However, it's still important to make sure that your most important content is visible and easily accessible on all devices.

**\[30:37\]** **Sean:** other addresses. Right. So another reason you might have a 301 redirect is that you're reorganizing or restructuring the content on your website as part of a redesign or modernization. The content may still be there, but it may have moved to a different section, in which case you set up your 301 redirect and everybody's happy. And the last thing is a 500 error page. And this is something you don't want to see. Basically, most times when you get a 500 error, your page is white. And it's like 500 error. Basically, there's some sort of server misconfiguration. And you need your web developer or your host another term from last episode to help you resolve that and get your website working again. And I believe that brings us to the end of the episode for today.

**\[31:36\]** **Mike:** Yeah it's a nice and fairly brief just over a half hour I think.

**\[31:42\]** **Sean:** Yeah a little bit of a shorter episode and our next episode is going to be on MVP. Oh, hey, there's another initialism. No, that's right. Yeah, minimal viable product. So we'll be talking all about that next week.

**\[31:57\]** **Mike:** Not most valuable player, although maybe we'll we'll talk about, you know, some rat, the raptors might show up next week. Depending on how the raptors do tomorrow, we may be talking about Kawaii Leonard or somebody as MVP. Exactly.

**\[32:13\]** **Sean:** All right. Anyways, thank you for listening and we'll talk to you next episode. Bye. Thank you for listening. Hope you enjoyed this show. I'm Sean Smith your co-host. You can find me at my company website, caffincreations.ca, on twitter at caff-e-i-n-e-c-r-e-e-8-i-o-n. On LinkedIn, my username is Caffeine Creations or you can search for Sean Smith based in Toronto.

**\[32:44\]** **Mike:** You should be able to find me there. And I'm Mike Mela. You can find me at my website blikewater.ca or on LinkedIn. My username is Mike Mela. That's M-I-K-E-M-E-L-L-A. And I'm on Twitter Twitter.com slash Mike Mela. And don't forget to subscribe to the show and

**\[33:03\]** **Sean:** share it with your friends on social media such as Facebook or LinkedIn. you can find us on Google Play, iTunes, Stitcher, or wherever you subscribe to your favorite podcast.

**\[33:14\]** **Mike:** And we're always looking for a topic and guest suggestions. So if you have any, hit us up at website 101podcast.com slash contact. Excellent. Thank you so much for listening. Thanks for listening.

Close Transcript 

Have a question for Sean, Mike, and Amanda? [Send us an email](/contact).

[![Listen on Google Play Music](/assets/images/google_podcasts_badge@2x.png)](https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly93ZWJzaXRlMTAxcG9kY2FzdC5jb20vZmVlZC5yc3M%3D)[![itunes badge](/assets/images/itunes-badge.png)](https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/website-101-podcast/id1449510012)[![itunes badge](/assets/images/spotify-logo.png)](https://open.spotify.com/show/3rmSM1R9t6q1U8DmYWJRSO?si=NrYPMgDaRV6Dd56PjEaPow)### Season 02

- 1 [ Season 2 Introduction](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-1/season-2-introduction/)
- 2 [ Web Hosting 101](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-2/web-hosting-101/)
- 3 [ How to Choose a Web Developer or Agency](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-3/how-to-choose-a-web-developer-or-agency/)
- 4 [ How Much Does a Website Cost](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-4/how-much-does-a-website-cost/)
- 5 [ Web Jargon Part One](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-5/web-jargon-part-one/)
- 6 [ Web Jargon Part Two](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-6/web-jargon-part-two/)
- 7 [ Website 101: MVP Strategy for Effective Web Development](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-7/minimal-viable-product/)
- 8 [ Copy Editing and Copy Writing](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-8/copy-editing-and-copy-writing/)
- 9 [ Photography and Stock Photos](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-9/photography-and-stock-photos/)
- 10 [ Ecommerce with Shopify](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-10/ecommerce-with-shopify/)
- 11 [ Season 2 Recap and Season 3 Teaser](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-02/episode-11/season-2-recap-and-season-3-teaser/)

### All Seasons

- [Season 01](https://website101podcast.com/season/01/)
- [Season 02](https://website101podcast.com/season/02/)
- [Season 03](https://website101podcast.com/season/03/)
- [Season 04](https://website101podcast.com/season/04/)
- [Season 05](https://website101podcast.com/season/05/)
- [Season 06](https://website101podcast.com/season/06/)
- [Season 07](https://website101podcast.com/season/07/)
- [Season 08](https://website101podcast.com/season/08/)
- [Season 09](https://website101podcast.com/season/09/)

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