Why Your Website Isn’t Getting You Customers (And How to Fix It)
Your Website Should Be Your Hardest-Working Employee
You’ve probably heard a lot about how your website is your “online storefront” or your “digital business card.” That’s cool and all, but honestly? If your website isn’t actually bringing in customers, it’s basically just a fancy brochure collecting digital dust.
The hard truth is that having a website isn’t enough anymore. It needs to work for you 24/7, grabbing attention, building trust, and making it simple for visitors to become paying customers.
If you’re stuck wondering “Why isn’t my website getting customers?”, don’t trip. This is a problem a lot of small businesses face. Let’s break down the real reasons behind it and what you can do today to flip the script.
1. No Clear Goal for Visitors (And Why That’s Killing You)
What’s Going Wrong
Think about this: someone lands on your homepage or service page. What happens next? If you don’t have one crystal-clear action for them to take, chances are they’re clicking away before you even realize it.
Most websites fall into the trap of trying to say everything and end up saying nothing. Visitors get overwhelmed or confused because they don’t know what to do next.
How to Fix It
Decide on one primary goal for each page. Do you want people to call you? Book a consultation? Fill out a contact form? Whatever it is, make it obvious.
Use big, bold call-to-action (CTA) buttons — and put them above the fold (the part of the page people see first without scrolling).
On mobile, make that button easy to tap.
Repeat the CTA a few times on longer pages — people skim, so keep giving them chances to take action.
Make the language clear and direct: “Call Now for a Free Quote,” “Book Your Appointment Today,” or “Get Your Free Estimate.”
If you want to test your site, ask a friend who’s never seen it before to tell you what they’re supposed to do next — if they can’t tell you right away, you need to make it clearer.
2. You’re Talking About Yourself Too Much 😬
What’s Going Wrong
Here’s a common mistake: your website talks about you: your history, your awards, your “about us,” before it even talks about the problems your customers face.
But your customers don’t really care about your business story at first. They care about how you can help them. If you don’t show you understand their pain points, they’ll bounce and find someone else who does.
How to Fix It
Flip your copy. Lead with your customers’ problems. Show empathy and understanding. For example, if you’re a plumber, don’t start with “We have 20 years experience.” Start with, “Got a leaky pipe or clogged drain? We get it. Emergencies happen, and we’re here to fix them fast.”
Then explain how you solve their problem – fast response times, quality parts, fair pricing, whatever you offer.
Your “About Us” story still matters, but keep it on its own page. Let your homepage and service pages be all about the visitor and their needs.
3. Your Website Sucks on Mobile (And You’re Losing Customers)
What’s Going Wrong
Did you know over 60% of web traffic is from mobile devices? If your website looks like garbage on a phone (with tiny text, buttons too close together, or pages that take forever to load), visitors are going somewhere else.
Even worse, Google ranks mobile-friendly sites higher in search results. So if your site isn’t responsive, you’re losing on two fronts: customers and SEO.
How to Fix It
Use Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test tool to check your site.
Fix slow loading times by compressing images and minimizing unnecessary code/plugins.
Make buttons big enough to tap (no pinching or zooming required).
Use readable font sizes (at least 16px).
Make sure your layout adapts smoothly to different screen sizes.
If you built your site in Elementor or another page builder, test their mobile view and adjust padding, font size, and button size for mobile specifically.
4. You’re Missing Trust Signals — And That’s Scaring Visitors Away
What’s Going Wrong
Visitors are naturally skeptical. Especially when they’re deciding to spend their money or time with a local business they don’t know.
If your website doesn’t have anything that proves you’re trustworthy and legit, people will bounce and go with someone else who looks more reliable.
How to Fix It
Add social proof everywhere you can:
Real testimonials with photos and names (bonus points if they’re local).
Case studies or before/after photos if relevant.
Photos of your team or your storefront — make it personal.
Show logos of any certifications, awards, or memberships.
Keep your contact info and social media links easy to find and active.
Make it obvious you’re a real business with happy customers.
5. You’re Not Using Local Keywords (So Nobody Finds You)
What’s Going Wrong
If you want local customers, your website needs to speak their language which means using local keywords.
Just “web designer” or “plumber” won’t cut it. You need to add your city, neighborhood, or region naturally into your content! Like “web design in Astoria, Oregon” or “emergency plumber serving Clatskanie.”
Without these local keywords, Google won’t show your site when locals search, and your phone stays silent.
How to Fix It
Include your location and service in your page titles, headers, and meta descriptions.
Write content that answers questions local customers ask.
Create location-specific pages if you serve multiple areas.
Don’t keyword-stuff, but sprinkle location naturally throughout.
This will help Google send local visitors your way who are ready to hire.
Wrap-Up: Your Website Can Work Harder (And You Can Fix It)
If your website isn’t getting customers, it’s probably one or more of these issues holding you back. Fixing them isn’t rocket science – it’s about making your site clear, trustworthy, easy to use, and found by the right people.
You don’t need to completely rebuild your site to start seeing better results. Small fixes can go a long way.
If you want me to help you figure out exactly what’s going wrong or need a hand making these fixes, I got you. Hit me up for a free site review or just to talk through your next move.
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