You had the website built. It looks fine. But the phone isn't ringing and the contact form is sitting empty.
You're not alone. Most small business websites we review have the same collection of issues — and none of them are insurmountable. Here's what we see most often, and what to do about it.
1. You're not ranking for anything useful
A website that nobody can find is a brochure with no postage. The first question we ask every new client is: what terms do your customers actually search for when they need what you offer?
If you built your site around your business name ("Joe's Plumbing Townsville") but nobody searches that, you'll never get organic traffic. You need to be ranking for intent-based searches — terms like "emergency plumber Townsville" or "blocked drain same day".
The fix: Do proper keyword research before you touch a single word of your site copy. Tools like Google Search Console (free), Ahrefs, or even the Google autocomplete suggestions will tell you what people actually search for in your area and industry.
2. Your page is too slow on mobile
Google uses mobile speed as a ranking signal, and Australian mobile connections are slower than we'd like to admit. A page that takes 4+ seconds to load on mobile will haemorrhage visitors.
The main culprits we see:
- Oversized images not compressed or served in modern formats (WebP)
- Blocking render scripts loaded in the
<head> - Too many third-party tools (chat widgets, booking tools, multiple analytics tags) firing on page load
The fix: Run your site through PageSpeed Insights and work through the recommendations. Compressing images alone usually moves the needle significantly.
3. There's no clear call to action
You'd be surprised how many business websites have no obvious next step. Visitors land, read a bit, and leave — because nobody told them what to do next.
Every page should answer: what do I want this visitor to do right now? Book a call. Request a quote. Download a guide. Sign up for a list. Pick one, make it prominent, and remove everything that competes with it.
"On a homepage, clarity beats cleverness every time."
The fix: Audit every page with a fresh pair of eyes. If you can't spot the primary CTA within 5 seconds of landing, your visitors can't either.
4. Your contact form has friction
Long forms kill conversions. Every additional field you ask for reduces the chance someone will complete it. Unless you genuinely need every piece of information to respond meaningfully, strip the form back.
For most small businesses, this is enough:
- Name
- Email or phone
- One line about what they need
That's it. You can get the rest of the details when you follow up.
The fix: Count your form fields. If it's more than 5, start cutting.
5. You're targeting the wrong audience
Sometimes the problem isn't the website at all — it's the traffic. If you're getting visitors but no enquiries, you might be attracting people who aren't your customers.
A physio clinic ranking for "physio exercises" will get lots of DIY traffic. A commercial cleaning company ranking for "how to clean carpet" will attract homeowners, not office managers.
The fix: Check your Google Search Console to see what queries you're actually ranking for. If the intent doesn't match your services, you need to adjust your content strategy.
Where to start
If any of these resonated, the practical first step is an honest audit of where you stand. We offer a free SEO audit that covers your current rankings, technical health, and the biggest opportunities — no cost, no obligation.
We'll tell you what's actually holding your site back and what to fix first.