Small Business Websites Look Professional.Conversions Tell a Different Story.
I spent weeks looking at small business websites across Brevard County, and I noticed something: most of them are visually clean. The layouts are modern, the photos are sharp, the navigation works.
Then I checked their contact forms, their checkout flows, their call-to-action buttons. That's where things fell apart.
The disconnect isn't about design taste, it's about friction. A site can look great and still make it hard for someone to do what you want them to do.
I've seen forms with 15 fields when 3 would work, buttons that don't stand out, pricing buried three clicks deep. Web design research from Moz shows conversion depends less on aesthetics and more on clarity and flow.
A visitor should know what to do within seconds.
What I found is that owners often confuse looks good with works well. Those are two different problems.
Our web design work addresses both, but the order matters: function first, then polish. A beautiful site that doesn't convert is just expensive decoration.
Pick your three most important actions: contact, buy, sign up. Map the exact path a visitor takes to complete each one and count the clicks and form fields. More than three clicks or five fields, cut it down. Friction, not design, is usually what's costing you.
