Author: Bryan Chung

  • What you see on your website may not be what Google sees.


    Many companies check their website with the human eye.

    The homepage loads.
    The design looks fine.
    The content appears normal.
    Everything seems to be working.

    But from the perspective of a search engine bot, the website may be telling a very different story.

    I have seen websites that look perfectly normal to visitors, but behind the surface, they were already affected by malicious code, spam content, suspicious redirects, or cloaking issues.

    To a human visitor, it still looks like a corporate website.

    To Google, it may look like a gambling site, a spam page, or a compromised domain.

    This is one reason why some companies invest in SEO for months, but still struggle to rank.

    The issue may not always be the keyword strategy.
    It may not always be the content.
    It may not even be the SEO agency.

    Sometimes, the website itself has been polluted.

    A proper website review should not only ask:
    “Does the website look okay?”
    It should also ask:
    What do users see?
    What does Google see?
    What is happening inside the backend and code?
    Are there hidden spam pages or suspicious indexed URLs?
    Is the website still trustworthy from a technical and search engine perspective?
    A corporate website is not only a design asset.
    It is part of your company’s digital trust.
    And digital trust is not built only by looking professional on the surface.
    It is built by being clean, secure, credible, and consistent behind the surface too.
    A website that looks normal is not always a website that is healthy.
    Before investing more into SEO, sometimes the smarter question is:
    Is Google seeing the same website that your customers are seeing?

  • Thinking of hiring a web designer for your business

    Thinking of hiring a web designer for your business

    Most businesses choose a web designer based on design style.

    That is the wrong criterion.

    A visually impressive website that loads slowly, breaks on mobile, and cannot be found on Google has failed its core purpose regardless of how it looks on a desktop in a well-lit showroom.

    The skills that actually matter for a business website in Malaysia go well beyond aesthetics:

    • Responsive, mobile-first design (over 60% of local traffic is mobile)
    • SEO-ready page structure from the first build decision
    • UX planning that guides visitors toward an enquiry not just a scroll
    • Basic HTML and CSS knowledge so design decisions don’t break in production
    • CMS experience so you can manage your own content after launch
    • Business understanding the ability to ask the right questions before designing

    The last point is the one most often missing.

    A designer who waits to be told exactly what to do will produce exactly what they are told not what the business actually needs.

    Before hiring, ask one question: “How do you approach a project before you open a design tool?”

    The answer tells you more than any portfolio.