How to Audit Your Own Website (When You're Not Getting Sales)
A proper guide for small business owners who know something's wrong with their website but can't figure out what.
Traffic's fine. Enquiries aren't.
You've checked the site works. You've refreshed the contact form. You've even asked a mate to look at it — they said it "seems fine."
It's not fine. Something's off. You just can't see it.
Visitors land, can't figure out what you do or why they should care, and leave. Usually within 5 seconds. Most of this is fixable. Often in an afternoon.
The Quick Scorecard
Website Audit Scorecard
Download the printable version of this scorecard. Score each item from 1-5, total it up, and see exactly where your website needs work.
- Printable PDF checklist
- Scoring guide included
- Priority recommendations
Score each honestly from 1-5
Can someone tell what you do in 5 seconds?
Is it clear what they actually get?
Do you have proof you're legit?
Does it work properly on a phone?
Does it load in under 3 seconds?
Is the next step obvious?
Can people contact you without faff?
Does it answer their real questions?
Do you know what's actually happening?
Your Score
- 36-45 — Solid. Focus on optimisation.
- 25-35 — Gaps to close. Fix your two lowest scores first.
- Under 25 — Foundations need work. Start with clarity.
Part 1: The Real Problem
It's probably not your design.
Beautiful websites convert terribly all the time. Ugly ones print money. The difference is always clarity.
After looking at hundreds of small business sites, the pattern's the same: visitors can't figure out what's going on.
The 5-Second Test
Show your homepage to someone who knows nothing about your business. Give them 5 seconds. Hide it. Ask three questions:
What does this business do?
Who is it for?
What should you do next?
If they can't answer clearly, that's your problem. Not the colours. Not the fonts. The message.
The "We Help Businesses Grow" Disease
"We help you succeed online"
"Quality service, every time"
"Your partner in growth"
"Premium solutions for modern businesses"
"Google Ads management for UK trades and local services. More calls, less wasted spend."
"Websites for independent clinics in Manchester — built to turn visitors into bookings."
"Boiler servicing in Leeds. Same-day callouts, fixed prices, no surprises."
Specific. Clear. Useful. One line tells you what they do, who it's for, and what you get.
What Your Homepage Needs (Above the Fold)
A headline that names what you do
Not a slogan
A subheading that says who it's for and what they get
One obvious next step
Call, book, get a quote
Something that builds trust
Review count, years in business, client logos
Part 2: The Clarity Audit
This is where most websites fall over.
The Value Proposition Formula
Your value proposition is the clear reason someone should choose you. In plain language. Two formulas that work:
I help [who] get [result] without [pain].
[Service] for [type of customer] in [area], so you can [benefit].
Examples in action
"I help busy clinic owners fill their appointment books without spending all day on marketing."
"Accountancy for freelancers in the UK, so you can focus on the work instead of the paperwork."
Look at your homepage. Does your headline do this? Or does it say something vague about "solutions" and "excellence"?
Above the Fold Checklist
Headline names your service
Not just your business name
Subheading mentions who it's for and what they get
One primary CTA button that stands out
At least one trust signal
Reviews, logos, years, accreditation
No jargon your customers wouldn't use
Real imagery that supports the message
Not generic stock
The "Best Customer" Exercise
Stop trying to speak to everyone. "We work with businesses of all sizes!" tells me nothing about whether you're right for me.
Think of your three best customers. The ones who pay well, are easy to work with, and refer others. For each, write down:
What were they trying to achieve?
What were they worried about?
What made them finally get in touch?
What questions did they ask before saying yes?
Now look at your website. Does it speak to those people? Address their worries? Answer their questions? If you're not sure, you're probably not.
Part 3: The Offer Audit
Lots of sites describe what they do. Fewer explain what you actually get.
What Every Service Page Needs
What exactly do I get?
Not vague deliverables. Specifics. "5-page website with contact form, mobile responsive, delivered in 4 weeks" beats"comprehensive web solutions" every time.
What's included vs what's not?
Prevents awkward conversations. Shows you know what you're doing.
Who is this for (and not for)?
"This is for established businesses looking to grow, not startups still figuring out their offer." That honesty builds trust.
How long does it take?
Timelines reduce uncertainty. Even a range helps.
What does it cost?
If you can't show prices, explain why and give a range."Most projects fall between £2,000 and £5,000 depending on complexity"is better than nothing.
Service Page Checklist
Plain-English description of what the service is
Clear deliverables (what they actually get)
Who it's for
Timeline or timeframe
Pricing or pricing guidance
Step-by-step process
Proof (testimonials, results, examples)
One clear CTA
Before / After
"We provide comprehensive marketing solutions tailored to your unique business needs."
"Our platform includes advanced analytics, custom integrations, and dedicated support."
"Monthly marketing management for e-commerce brands doing £500k+. We run your ads, emails, and reporting — you get a weekly update and more time to focus on product."
"See exactly where your leads come from. Connect to tools you already use. Talk to a real person when something breaks."
Part 4: The Trust Audit
Every visitor is silently asking: "Can I trust these people?"
If your website doesn't answer that, they'll find someone whose website does.
What Visitors Are Actually Thinking
Your website should address all of these. Not in a FAQ buried at the bottom. Throughout.
Trust Signals That Work
Testimonials that say what changed
"Great service!" means nothing. This means something:
Before working with Sarah, we were getting 2-3 enquiries a week. Now we're turning work away. She rebuilt our Google Ads from scratch and we finally know what's working.
Specifics. Results. A real name.
Case studies with structure
Problem → What you did → Results. With numbers.
"We helped a client improve their marketing."
"Email revenue went from £50k to £1m+ in 18 months by fixing their flows and segmentation."
Trust Checklist
At least 3 testimonials with names and specifics
At least 1 case study with real results
Photos of you or your team (not stock)
Business details easy to find
Relevant certifications displayed
Content is up to date
This Week's Quick Wins
Email 5 happy customers
Ask for a testimonial with a specific prompt: "What was the situation before, what changed, and would you recommend us?"
Take a photo at work
Doesn't have to be professional. Has to be real.
Write one case study
One page. What was the problem, what did you do, what happened.
Add contact details to every page footer
Part 5: The Conversion Audit
People understand what you do. They trust you. They want to get in touch. Can they actually do that without friction?
The Form Problem
The Expedia lesson
Expedia removed a single confusing optional field. It made them an extra $12 million that year.
Look at your forms. How many fields do you have? Which ones do you actually need? Name. Email. What they need help with. That's usually enough.
CTA Audit
Your call-to-action buttons should:
Be visible without scrolling (at least one)
Use specific language
"Get a free quote" not "Submit"
Contrast with the rest of the page
Be big enough to tap on mobile
Ask for one primary action per page
"Submit" is the worst button text. It tells people nothing."Get my quote" or "Book a call" or "Send message" all work better.
Contact Page Checklist
Multiple contact options
Form, phone, email
Expectation setting
"We reply within 1 working day"
Business hours
Physical address if relevant
A short, reassuring message
"No pressure, just a conversation"
Mobile Check
Can you complete the main action one-handed?
Is text readable without zooming?
Are buttons big enough to tap accurately?
Does the menu work?
Does the form work?
Part 6: The Technical Stuff
You don't need to be a developer. You need 10 minutes and some free tools.
Speed
Speed matters
Going from 1 to 3 seconds increases bounce rate by 32%. Speed directly affects whether Google shows you in search results.
Check yours: Go to PageSpeed Insights and enter your URL.
Mobile score under 50? Problem. Under 30? Emergency.
Common fixes:
Compress your images
Most sites have massive files
Remove plugins you're not using
Talk to your hosting provider
The One-Handed Phone Test
Open your website on your phone. Try to:
Understand what you do within 5 seconds
Navigate to your main service
Find your contact details
Submit an enquiry
If any of those are difficult one-handed, that's what your customers are experiencing.
SEO Basics That Actually Matter
Page titles should describe what's on the page
"Boiler Servicing Leeds | Fast Response, Fixed Prices | Company Name" — not "Home | Company Name"
Each service gets its own page
Google can't rank one page for everything.
Local signals for local businesses
If you serve a specific area, mention it everywhere. Headlines, copy, every page.
Google Business Profile matters more than your website for local
If you haven't claimed it, do that today. Fill out every field. Ask for reviews.
Free Tools
| Tool | What it does |
|---|---|
| PageSpeed Insights | Speed check + fix recommendations |
| Search Console | What searches bring people to your site |
| Google Business Profile | Your local listing on Google Maps |
| Microsoft Clarity | Free heatmaps and session recordings |
Part 7: What to Fix First
You've got a list. Don't try to fix everything at once. That's how projects stall.
The Priority Matrix
Do this week
High impact, low effort
- • Rewrite your homepage headline
- • Add a clear CTA above the fold
- • Remove unnecessary form fields
- • Add phone number to every page
- • Fix any broken links
Plan these
High impact, more effort
- • Build proper service pages
- • Get real testimonials
- • Improve site speed
- • Fix mobile issues
Later
Lower priority
- • Minor design tweaks
- • Fancy animations
- • Rewriting old blog posts
The Sequence That Works
Clarity first
If people don't understand what you do, nothing else matters
Trust second
Once they understand, they need reasons to believe you
Conversion third
Make it easy to take action
Technical fourth
Speed, mobile, the stuff that quietly drains results
One thing at a time. Measure. Move on.
What to Remember
The businesses that see 200-500% improvements in conversions aren't doing anything complicated.
No fancy tools. No breakthrough tactics. Just the basics, done properly:
Clear about what they do
Proof they can be trusted
Easy to take action
Your website should work as hard as you do. Now you know what to check. Start with your lowest score. Change one thing. See what happens.
Need a second pair of eyes?
If you'd like a professional audit or help implementing these changes, let's have a conversation.
No obligation, no hard sell.
Get in touch