Your Current Website Is Costing You Customers. Let's Fix That.
Pull out your phone and look at your website right now. Really look at it. Does it load fast? Is the text readable without zooming? Can someone tap a button to call you without scrolling through three pages of content?
If you hesitated on any of those, your website isn't helping your business — it's hurting it. Every visitor who lands on a slow, dated, confusing site and hits the back button is a customer you just lost to someone with a better online presence.
A redesign isn't about making things prettier. It's about making your website actually do its job — bring in leads, build trust, and convert visitors into paying customers.
When a Redesign Stops Being Optional
You might think your site is "good enough." But "good enough" has a cost — you just don't see the lost leads. Here's when it's time to stop putting it off:
It wasn't built for mobile. More than 60% of all local searches happen on smartphones. If your site isn't designed for mobile first, the majority of potential customers are getting a broken experience and leaving.
It loads like it's 2014. Google has been clear — page speed is a ranking factor. If your site takes more than three seconds to load, you're losing visitors and search position simultaneously. That's a double hit.
It doesn't show up on Google. You paid someone to build a site three years ago, but SEO was an afterthought — or not thought about at all. The site exists, but it generates zero organic traffic. It's the digital equivalent of a billboard in your basement.
The design screams "outdated." Web design trends move fast. A site that looked current in 2019 can feel neglected in 2026. And potential customers associate a dated website with a dated business.
You can't make changes. Your original developer moved on. Your WordPress dashboard is a graveyard of expired plugins. You want to update your services or add a new phone number, but you literally can't access the backend. So nothing changes, and the site slowly becomes less relevant.
What a Proper Redesign Includes
This isn't a cosmetic refresh where I change your color scheme and call it done. It's a full rebuild designed around performance, search visibility, and lead generation:
- Mobile-first design — built for phones and tablets first, then scaled up for desktop. Because that's how your customers are actually browsing.
- Local SEO from the ground up — proper URL structure, meta data, location-specific content, schema markup, and internal linking — all built to help you rank in your local market.
- Conversion-focused layout — phone numbers always visible, quote request forms on every page, click-to-call on mobile, and CTAs that guide visitors toward contacting you.
- Service and area pages — every service and every location you serve gets a dedicated page, giving Google more entry points and customers a clearer path to what they need.
- Performance optimized — clean code, compressed images, minimal scripts. Fast load times on every device, every connection.
See what a properly built website looks like
A Redesign That Doesn't Require a Leap of Faith
The traditional redesign process asks you to pay $3,000–$8,000 upfront, wait two to three months for delivery, and hope the finished product is better than what you started with. If it's not? You've already paid. If it doesn't rank? That's a separate conversation — and usually a separate invoice.
Subscription web designers offer monthly payments instead, which sounds more manageable — until the 12-month contract means you're committed to $1,800–$2,400 whether the redesign actually moves the needle or not. You're paying for the promise of improvement, not proof of it.
I flip that model. Your redesigned website gets built first. You see the finished product, compare it to your current site, and decide if you want to move forward. Only then does your monthly subscription start — Lite or Pro. No upfront costs. No annual contract. Cancel anytime with 30 days' notice.
A redesign should be a clear upgrade, not a gamble. You should be able to see the improvement before you invest.
Stop Losing Business to a Website That Doesn't Perform
Your old site isn't just sitting there doing nothing — it's actively sending potential customers to your competitors. Every day it stays live in its current state is a day you're leaving money on the table.
I'll build the replacement. You compare the two. If the new one isn't clearly better, you don't pay.