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 actually 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 that 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 small business owners often confuse "looks good" with "works well." Those are two different problems. Our web design approach focuses on both, but the order matters: function first, then polish. A beautiful site that doesn't convert is just expensive decoration.
Worth trying: Pick your three most important actions (contact, buy, sign up). Map the exact path a visitor takes to complete each one. Count the clicks and form fields. If it's more than three clicks or more than five fields, cut it down.
