In my work with small businesses and non-profits across dozens of industries, I’ve found that once the foundational elements are in place, there’s a second tier of website strategies that can dramatically increase conversion rates. These aren’t about major overhauls – they’re strategic adjustments that often produce outsized results. With that said, let’s take a look at five more practical website changes that build on the foundational tips from my last post.
Here’s a stat that keeps me up at night: more than 70% of small business websites have a primary call-to-action (CTA) that’s either buried, bland, or completely missing. Your website visitors need clear direction. When they arrive on your site and connect with your message, what exact step should they take next? Too many choices create decision paralysis.
How to fix this:
We’ve become increasingly impatient online. Research shows that 40% of visitors will abandon a website that takes more than 3 seconds to load. Think about that – you could be losing nearly half your potential clients before they even see your content. And here’s the kicker: Google knows this too. Site speed is now a ranking factor, meaning slow sites get pushed down in search results.
Steps to increase your site speed:
This might sound obvious in 2025, but you’d be surprised how many small business websites still prioritize their desktop experience. The reality? Over 60% of web traffic now comes from mobile devices, and Google primarily uses the mobile version of your site for ranking. Yet most businesses still design their websites on desktop computers, treating mobile as an afterthought.
What mobile-first really means:
Speaking of forms – they’re often the final hurdle between a prospect and becoming a lead. Yet most contact forms I see are designed to gather information the business wants rather than creating a frictionless experience for the visitor.
Here’s a counterintuitive approach: Add a simple checkbox that says: “I’m not quite ready to talk – please send me your case study instead.” Suddenly prospects who aren’t sales-ready have a low-commitment way to engage. These “not ready” leads often convert to sales conversations within weeks.
Other contact form optimizations that work:
Remember: a form that collects less information but gets completed is infinitely more valuable than a comprehensive form that gets abandoned.
Modern chatbots can transform your website from a static information source into an interactive experience that engages visitors and captures leads around the clock.
Here’s why chatbots are game-changers:
One professional services firm I worked with added a simple chatbot that offered visitors three options: schedule a call, download a resource, or ask a question. Within the first month, they captured 23 leads that would have otherwise bounced – 7 of which turned into paying clients.
You don’t need complex AI or expensive systems to get started. Even a basic chatbot with pre-programmed responses to your most common questions can dramatically improve your conversion rates.
I understand if you feel that implementing all these changes at once would be overwhelming. The good news? You don’t have to. These website optimizations work incrementally, with each one building on the last.
Here’s what I typically recommend to my clients:
My challenge to you this week: Time how long it takes your website to load, then implement at least one speed optimization. Even a one-second improvement can significantly impact your visitor engagement and conversion rates.
In my next post, I’ll discuss the specific tools and technologies you should be adding to your website – including the analytics platforms, automation systems, and integration tools that can turn your website from a standalone asset into the central hub of your entire marketing ecosystem.
Stay tuned!