The Two Ways to Get Found on Google (And Why Utah Businesses Need Both)
Last quarter, a Utah business owner sat across from me on a discovery call. She wanted a new website. Her current site was four years old, slow, and built on a platform she had grown to hate. Simple project on the surface.
Then I asked the question I always ask: do you own your current site?
She didn’t know.
We pulled up her account. The website was built and hosted by a marketing company that had locked the source code, the page templates, and her entire customer database behind their platform. She could leave. She just couldn’t take any of it with her unless she paid a four-figure exit fee plus an ongoing monthly fee to access her own data. The website she thought she owned, she was renting. The contact list she had spent four years building, she was renting. Even her domain DNS lived inside their account.
This is far more common than most small business owners realize. If you have not done a clean ownership audit of your marketing setup, there is a real chance you are renting things you think you own. This post is the checklist.
Why So Many Small Business Owners End Up Renting Their Marketing
Most marketing companies do not pitch their services as "rental." They pitch a website, an SEO program, an email platform. What they often build, though, is something that only works while you are paying them.
There are three reasons this happens:
- The platform is proprietary. You cannot move the site to another host because the underlying code is theirs, not yours.
- The data is locked. Your contact list, customer database, and analytics live in their system. Exports are limited, gated, or impossible.
- The access is single-threaded. The vendor is the only one with admin access to your domain, your hosting, your CRM, sometimes even your Google Workspace.
When you decide to switch vendors, all three of these become bargaining chips. Not yours. Theirs. The problem is invisible until the moment you try to leave, and by then you are months and thousands of dollars from a clean exit.
The Five Things Every Small Business Should Own
Use this as a checklist. If you cannot answer "yes, fully" to each of these, you have an ownership gap.
1. Your Website
You should have administrator access to your website’s CMS and the ability to add or remove users yourself. The site should be built on a platform you can take with you. WordPress, Webflow, and Shopify are easier to migrate than proprietary builders.
2. Your Domain
Your domain name should be registered to your business, with the login held by you or your IT vendor. Not your marketing agency. If the agency owns the domain registration, you do not own your web address.
3. Your Customer Data
You should have admin access to your CRM and the ability to export every contact and lead record on demand. If the platform does not allow a full export, that is a structural ownership problem.
4. Your Content
Every piece of website copy, every blog post, every SEO deliverable should be backed up in a file you control. If your only copy lives inside your agency’s CMS, you do not own your content.
5. Your Workspace and Email
Your business email, your Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 account, and your DNS records should be in accounts you control, ideally administered by an IT vendor working directly for you. The marketing agency building or maintaining your website should coordinate with your IT vendor, not replace them. Anyone touching DNS or domain records can affect your business email, and that is not a fight you want on a Friday afternoon.
Red Flags When You’re Hiring (or Already Working With) a Marketing Vendor
Watch for these patterns:
- The vendor will not give you full admin access to your own systems.
"We manage that for you" is fine. "You cannot have a login" is not. - Your contract has an exit fee for taking your website with you.
Setup and design fees are normal. Ransom on your own assets is not. - The vendor refuses to work alongside outside IT, web developers, or SEO consultants.
A confident vendor welcomes other pros checking the work. A protective vendor wants to be the only voice in the room. - Data export options are unclear or "available on request."
A real ownership policy means a one-click export. - You cannot identify what platform your website actually runs on.
If "the agency built it" is the most specific answer, that is a red flag. - The vendor’s contract gives them ownership of the content they produce.
Read the IP clause. Content you paid for should belong to you.
Any one of these on its own is a conversation. Two or three together means you should start auditing now, not when you decide to leave.
How to Audit What You Actually Own (30 minutes, 5 steps)
Block thirty minutes this week. Do this:
- List every marketing tool and platform your business uses. Website CMS, hosting, domain registrar, CRM, email platform, GBP, ad accounts, analytics.
- Confirm who has admin access to each. It should be you, your team, or an IT vendor working directly for you.
- Test the export. Can you pull your data out today in a usable format?
- Confirm where the credentials live. Your password manager, not your agency’s.
- For your website, confirm what platform it runs on. If you do not know, your agency should be able to tell you in one sentence. If they cannot or will not, that is the answer.
If any step turns up a gap, document it. Do not act yet. Knowing the gap is half the work.
If You’re Already Mid-Contract and Locked In
If you are a small business owner mid-contract with an agency that is blocking exports, locking your domain, or refusing to share admin access, do not start a fight on Friday afternoon. Get the audit in writing first. Document what you have access to and what you do not. Then decide whether to renegotiate, exit at contract end, or pay the fee and move.
The wrong move is paying for a new website while the old vendor still owns your domain and your customer list. That is how owners get charged twice for the same migration.
Own It, Don’t Rent It
Owning your marketing is not a tech problem. It is a discipline. Most small business owners do not have an ownership policy because no one ever told them they needed one. The cost of finding out at the wrong moment is real: lost contacts, lost SEO equity, lost months. That is exactly the kind of avoidable waste we built Tobe to eliminate.
Waste less. Grow smarter.
If you want a second set of eyes on your current setup, book a free Grow Smarter Assessment. We will audit what you actually own, flag the gaps, and tell you what to fix first.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How do I know if I own my website?
A: You own your website if you have administrator access to its content management system, the domain registration is in your business name, and you can export the site files or content on demand. If any of those three are no, you do not fully own it.
Q: Can a marketing agency legally own my website or my customer data?
A: It depends on the contract you signed. Some agencies retain ownership of platforms they build on proprietary systems, and some retain rights to content they create. Read the IP clause and the data clause before signing. If you have already signed, ask for a written exit policy and a one-click export confirmation.
Q: What is the fastest way to switch marketing agencies without losing my data?
A: Audit your access first, before you give notice. Confirm you can export your contact list, your website content, and your analytics. Get the domain transfer authorization code from the registrar. Set up your new platform and migrate before you cancel the old one.