Your website isn't bringing in customers
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Visitors leave without buying or contacting you
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People don't understand what you do
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No one can find your website on Google
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Common Questions About Your Website
What's the title that shows up in my browser tab, and why does it matter?
That little text at the top of your browser tab is the first thing Google uses to figure out what your page is about. If it's generic like "Home" or "Welcome," Google won't know what you do and won't show your page to people searching for your services.
Why does Google show the wrong description for my business?
When people search for you, Google shows a snippet of text below your link. If yours is missing or poorly written, Google makes up its own by grabbing random text that often makes no sense and kills your clicks.
Why do visitors look at my page for 10 seconds and leave?
If visitors can't instantly understand what you do and how you help them, they're gone. Vague headlines, walls of text, and missing calls-to-action are the usual culprits that send people straight to your competitor.
What if my business values and personality aren't coming through?
If your page could work for any competitor, you'll compete on price alone. Your unique differentiators - whether you're family-owned, eco-friendly, or obsessed with quality - need to be obvious in your headline and main content, not buried where nobody looks.
Is my page too technical for normal people to understand?
Industry jargon kills sales because real customers don't talk like that. If you're saying "turnkey solutions" instead of "we handle everything for you," you're losing people who would happily pay you if they just understood what you're offering.
Does my page make it clear what cities or areas I serve?
If people in nearby towns can't immediately tell you serve them, they'll call someone else. Service areas need to be prominent in your headline or first paragraph, not buried in tiny footer text that nobody reads.
Why do people call my competitors instead of me?
Your competitors aren't necessarily better - they just make it easier to choose them. If your page makes people hunt for your phone number, wonder if you serve their area, or guess what you actually charge, they'll call whoever makes it obvious instead.
Does Google actually understand what my business does?
Google needs you to explicitly say what you do, not hint at it. If you're a family law attorney but never actually write those words on your page, Google won't show you to people searching for a family law attorney.
Is my phone number easy to find?
If visitors have to scroll or click around to find how to contact you, most won't bother. Your phone number needs to be visible the second someone lands on your page, ideally in the top corner where people expect to find it.
How do I know if my page is actually the problem?
Stop guessing and get concrete data. Our free analysis shows you exactly what visitors see, what Google sees, and which specific changes will actually bring in more customers instead of wasting money fixing the wrong things.