Every small business website needs: a clear headline of what you do, easy contact with a click-to-call button, your services, location or service area, hours, trust signals (reviews and real photos), and one obvious call to action. It must load fast and work on a phone. Everything else is optional.
A small business website doesn't need to be big or clever. It needs to do a few simple things well: tell a visitor what you do, build a little trust, and make the next step easy. Here's the checklist I run through for every site I build — the essentials, the findability basics, and the bloat worth leaving off.
The essentials (the non-negotiables)
If your site is missing any of these, fix them first:
- A clear headline — within a second, a visitor should know what you do and who it's for. No clever slogans that leave people guessing.
- Obvious contact, with click-to-call — your phone number tappable on mobile, plus a simple form. Don't make anyone hunt.
- Mobile-first design — most of your visitors are on a phone, so the phone view isn't an afterthought, it's the main event.
- Fast loading — a slow site loses people before it appears, and speed is a confirmed Google ranking factor.
- Your services or products — clearly listed in plain words customers actually use.
- Location or service area — your suburb and the areas you cover, with a map if you have premises.
- Opening hours — so nobody has to call to find out if you're open.
- Trust signals — real photos of your work or team, and a few genuine reviews. These do more selling than any amount of copy.
- One clear call to action — call, book or get a quote. Tell people exactly what to do next.
- Simple navigation — a handful of clear links, not a sprawling menu.
The findability basics
A great site nobody can find is a poster in a locked room. Cover these so Google can do its job:
- A proper page title and description for each page, written for what people search.
- Your location in the actual content — naturally, not stuffed — so Google connects you to your area.
- A link to your Google Business Profile, and consistent name, address and phone everywhere.
- HTTPS / an SSL certificate so the site is secure and doesn't show a "not secure" warning.
For the full picture on this, see our guide to getting your business found on Google.
The nice-to-haves
Useful for some businesses, but not essential to launch — add them when they earn their place:
- Online booking or appointment scheduling.
- A gallery or portfolio of past work.
- A blog or guides section (great for SEO over time, like this one).
- Online payments or a simple shop.
- A frequently-asked-questions section.
What to leave off
More isn't better. These add weight and distraction and usually hurt:
- Autoplaying video or music — slows the page and annoys people.
- Giant image sliders — most visitors never see past the first slide, and they drag load times down.
- Aggressive pop-ups the moment someone arrives.
- Walls of text nobody reads — say it in fewer, clearer words.
- Stock-photo overload — obviously fake images quietly erode trust. Real beats polished.
The 5-second test: show your homepage to someone who's never heard of you. If, in five seconds, they can tell what you do, where, and how to get in touch — it's working. If not, simplify.
How many pages do you actually need?
Fewer than you think. Most local businesses do beautifully with a home page, a services page, an about page and a contact page — and a simple trade or shop can run on a single well-built page. Clarity beats page count every time. If you're still deciding whether to build at all, start with do I need a website?, and for budgets see what a website should cost.
Want a site that ticks every box?
Every site I build covers this checklist by default — fast, mobile-first, clear and easy to contact. I'll show you a free mockup of yours, no cost and no obligation.
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