FAQ – Frequently Asked Questions

SiteByte FAQ information knowledge illustration

1. What is SiteByte in one sentence?

SiteByte on zvirec.com is a practical web resource that helps people in the United States make better decisions about their websites and digital products, using clear explanations, real-world examples, and downloadable tools like checklists.

We do not try to turn FAQ into another “About Us” page. Instead, these questions focus on how to use the site, what you can rely on, and where the limits of our materials are.


2. Do I need an account or subscription to use SiteByte?

You can read articles, explore topics, and download available checklists without creating an account and without paying a subscription fee. SiteByte is designed first and foremost as an open, educational resource for readers in the U.S.—for individuals, specialists, and businesses that work with websites in different roles.

In the future, additional products or paid options may appear (for example, more in-depth formats or structured programs). If any material requires payment or a separate agreement, that will always be clearly marked so you can see what is free and what is not before you commit.


3. How should I use your articles and checklists in practice?

The easiest way to treat SiteByte is as a working toolkit for your website tasks. When you have a concrete problem—such as preparing for a redesign, auditing an existing site, or planning a new section—you can:

  • choose an article that matches the problem, read it from start to finish, and then download the checklist if one is attached;
  • go through the checklist point by point on your own site, using it as a “to-do” list or agenda for discussions with your team, contractor, or client.

This approach helps you move from passive reading to structured action. Instead of trying to remember every idea, you keep the checklist as a compact, repeatable process that can be reused for multiple projects.

At the end of many articles, you will also see a short question addressed to readers. We encourage you to answer it and share your experience in the comments. Your story might give someone else a practical shortcut: a real example of what worked or failed in a similar situation.


4. Can I use SiteByte content in my paid client work or business?

Yes. You are welcome to apply concepts, frameworks, and checklists from SiteByte in your commercial projects—whether you run a small business, work as a freelancer, or manage websites for a larger organization in the U.S.

However, you should treat our materials as educational guidance, not as a contract or legal shield. If a decision carries legal, financial, or compliance risks, it is important to combine what you read here with advice from qualified professionals (for example, attorneys, accountants, or security specialists) who understand your specific situation and jurisdiction.


5. How can SiteByte help professionals like developers, designers, or marketers?

If you already work with websites professionally, SiteByte can support you in a few ways:

You can send articles to clients or colleagues who are not deeply technical, so they can quickly get up to speed on a topic before a meeting or project. You can also refer to specific articles or checklists when you are explaining why a particular step is necessary: for example, why it is important to plan navigation early or to test performance on real devices, not only in lab tools.

In this sense, SiteByte acts as an external, neutral reference point. Instead of saying “trust me, this is the right way,” you can point to a structured explanation that helps non-experts understand both the reasoning and the trade-offs.


6. What exactly are the downloadable checklists?

Downloadable checklists on SiteByte are short documents designed to turn an article into a sequence of concrete checks and actions. They are not meant to be legal contracts or long reports; they are practical, working tools.

You might use a checklist to:

  • prepare for a website launch or relaunch by verifying a series of technical and content steps;
  • run a quick internal review of usability, accessibility, or content consistency for one section of the site;
  • organize a discussion with a contractor or vendor so that important questions are not overlooked.

You are free to adapt these checklists to your own workflow: add your own items, reorder steps, or create separate versions for different types of projects. Many readers keep them as part of their internal documentation or onboarding materials for new team members.


7. Why is there a question at the end of so many articles?

The short question at the end of an article is there for a reason. It helps turn the content from a one-way explanation into a conversation with real-world experience.

When you answer that question, you:

  • connect the topic of the article to your own situation;
  • show others what actually happened when you tried a similar approach;
  • help build a collection of grounded, concrete stories that complement the main text.

For some readers, the most valuable insight comes not from the article itself, but from someone’s comment: for example, how a small change in structure increased leads, or how a rushed redesign created unexpected issues. Sharing your experience can make you part of that chain of practical knowledge.


8. Do you provide one-on-one consulting or individual recommendations?

SiteByte is not designed as a personal consulting service. The articles, examples, and checklists are prepared as general, educational materials that can be useful to a wide audience.

We cannot, through the site alone:

  • review your contracts, policies, or compliance documents;
  • take responsibility for specific technical implementations;
  • provide legal, tax, or investment advice tailored to your business.

If you need individual support, it is better to work directly with professionals who can analyze your particular case. Our materials can help you come prepared to such conversations, with clearer questions and a better understanding of the topics you want to discuss.


9. How often do you update your content?

We periodically review and update our articles, especially in areas where the environment changes quickly—such as browser capabilities, search behavior, or expectations of website visitors in the U.S.

When practices evolve or certain approaches become outdated, we aim to update the relevant articles instead of quietly leaving them as they are. In cases where there is no single “correct” approach, we work to describe multiple options and explain the trade-offs between them, so you can choose what best fits your goals, risk tolerance, and constraints.

If you notice that a particular article looks outdated or incomplete, you can always let us know. Reader feedback plays a real role in helping us prioritize what needs revisiting.


10. May I quote or reuse your content in my presentations or internal documents?

You are allowed to quote reasonable excerpts from SiteByte articles in:

  • internal company presentations, training materials, or team documents.

We ask that you credit the source (zvirec.com or the relevant SiteByte page) and avoid copying full articles or presenting our work as your own original content. If you are preparing a public talk, an external guide, or other materials that rely heavily on a specific article, it is good practice to mention that the ideas are based in part on SiteByte and include a link.

If you plan to reuse substantial portions of text or examples inside a commercial product or a widely distributed resource, it is best to contact us first to discuss format and permissions.


11. How can I contact you or suggest a topic?

You can reach us directly by email:

Email: [email protected]

This address can be used if you want to:

  • suggest a topic that seems important for people in the U.S. who work with websites, services, or online content;
  • point out a possible error, unclear passage, or outdated recommendation in an article;
  • briefly describe a real-world case that could be helpful as an anonymized example in future materials.

We cannot promise to respond to every message in detail, but we do pay attention to recurring questions and themes. They strongly influence which topics we cover next and which checklists or explainer pieces we prepare.