15 Tips for Small Businesses with Websites

Russell Brunson says small businesses donāt need a website any more, they just need a sales funnel.
But your web presence doesnāt have to be hosted on ClickFunnels to effectively drive customers to call you up, or book an appointment or session.
His broader point is valid, though: Whatās the use of a website if it doesnāt help your business grow?
If your website is out-of-date, is badly designed, or has typos and pixelated images, your customers will simply click away back to Google and book or buy with your competitor instead ā I know I do.
Iāve been scouring hundreds of small business websites recently and have picked up on a number of trends in web design that are probably losing you business.
Here are my tips on sprucing up your website to attract and engage customers instead of putting them off.
First, the obvious ones ā¦
1. Proofread your website
Run all copy through Microsoft Wordās spellcheck at the very least, and have a someone read over it afterwards. If it doesnāt read well, if apostrophes are out of place, if there are typos, it can massively detrac from your image.
You would think this was obvious, but itās surprisingly easy for typos to slip in unnoticed (did you spot the one in the previous paragraph?!).
On the other end of the scaleā¦
Iāve seen websites that misspell their own company name, or ask you to check out their āFace Bookā page.
Running all your copy through spell check is a really easy way to ensure your spelling and grammar is on point!
The next ones all fit into the general bucket of āformattingā:
2. Avoid tiny font
People simply canāt read it, and if thereās a bunch of tiny text in a dense paragraph thatās not broken up in any way, that text aināt getting read.
Take this article as an example. The text is split up into short paragraphs. There are numbered titles. There are bullet points. Some bits are italicised.
Some bits are in quotes.
You see how itās easier to read than a solid block of size 10 text?
3. Avoid clichƩd fonts

Make sure your font is easy to read, not overused or clichĆ©d, and not on this list of Worst Fonts in the World. This will help you stand out as a brand with a unique āfeelā and just makes everything a lil more professional.
4. Be consistent
Use the same fonts throughout your website!
The text in one paragraph should normally all be the same font, size and colour. Headings can have a different font, size and colour but they too need to be consistent. And make sure each page of your website uses the same scheme.
If you want to emphasise certain words, you could use a heading, make it bold (sparingly), or put the sentence on a new line.
P.S. White text on a black background had a moment, but itās actually really hard to read!
What about my images? I canāt go wrong there, can I?
5. Make sure your images arenāt stretched or pixelated
High-quality images and graphics look much nicer.
To avoid this, you could preview your site before going live or making any changes, so you can iron out any issues with your images looking stretched, pixelated or cropped in the wrong places.
(With a template service like Squarespace this doesnāt tend to happen anyways.)
6. Use your own images
Showcase what your business does by using your own images.
You donāt need to hire a pro photographer and get models for a shoot. These days, even iPhone photos can be good enough quality.
You could top it up with stock images (that you have permission to use). But definitely use some of your own images too ā otherwise we risk losing a sense of what your business is about and your site could start to look generic.
Donāt use images belonging to other businesses ā¦
Of course you can feature the logos of brands your business uses. For example, if youāre a hair salon and you only use a certain product, thereās no problem with linking to their website and using their logo if you have permission.
But I saw one website that used another brandās image (the other brandās Instagram handle was prominent in the image itself) to show what a particular nail treatment would look like.
This company could easily have done the treatment on someone themselves, and then taken their own picture.
Apart from potentially breaching the other brandās intellectual property rights, using images that clearly come from someone elseās website or social media could give the impression that you actually donāt know how to do the service. And youāre losing the opportunity to showcase your own work anyway.
P.S. You can get tons of free professional stock images for website backgrounds or blogs from Pexels.com and Unsplash.com.
7. Use the right social media thumbnails

Using the Twitter logo from ten years ago can really date a website. Instead, you can look up the most recent branding for your social media links and thumbnails here:
8. Make sure images have a transparent background
If you want to insert a badge or logo, it will look much nicer if the image has a transparent background. Hereās what I mean:

This would have a much more professional feel if the white logo background was removed, right?
Luckily there is an easy fix for this: upload your image to Lunapic to remove the white background.
What about if my website is a template? Much of the design is done for me already by a professional ā surely I canāt go wrong here.
Here are a few mistakes Iāve seen āin the wildā that you can easily avoid when choosing and editing your template:
9. Delete irrelevant parts of the template
Do you have a blog?
Are you realistically going to start one?
If not ⦠it may be time to delete the blog section of your template. š
As a visitor, thereās nothing more disappointing than clicking the blog section of a brand you like, only to find thereās nothing there, or itās ācoming soonā.
I would suggest only putting the blog section in once you have 5 posts banked. This way, it really looks like a functioning blog that your visitors can go to for useful info.
10. Donāt use a blog template if itās not a blog
A regular website will typically have pages that you can reach through links on the homepage or from the main menu.
Unless you are a blog, it may be best to avoid using the blog format for your information pages. Itās much nicer if readers donāt have to scroll down through multiple posts to find the information they need, and instead can easily access it from the top menu.
If you have to use a blog template for your website, thereās often a way you can get rid of tell-tale blog apparatus ā like the date, tags and categories. Play around with the template to get the result you need!
11. Check all the links in your main menu
It sounds basic and this probably isnāt you ā¦
But I did find one website with about 20 broken links coming off the main menu and submenus. This is super frustrating for users ā it means they canāt get the information they need quickly, and will most likely go find it somewhere else.
Those 404 pages arenāt doing you any favours!
And now for the simply random ā¦
12. Donāt use images of banknotes
I saw one website which had the usual VISA and Mastercard logos and then, underneath, a picture of a £10 note, I think suggesting the company accepted cash payments.
Itās a criminal offence to digitally reproduce English banknotes ā unless you have permission from the Bank of England!
Definitely one to avoid.
13. Use a web platform in the language of your target customers
Or at least make sure that you replace all the original language text from the template with the language of your target customers.
I found one website where the contact form was in a different language. OK, it was fairly obvious that the button probably read āSubmitā, but I was still a little confused.
Even something as small as this can be a roadblock to the total professionalism and trust you need to convert your customers.
14. Make sure you own your domain name
This oneās a little tangential, but I came across one company whose Facebook business page featured a website link that just didnāt lead anywhere.
(The non-existent website link was also incorporated into their profile picture.)
It turned out that this company didnāt even own the domain name.
This can be irritating for users who click the link expecting to find your website, but thereās also a genuine risk here.
If you donāt own the domain name youāre publicly claiming is yours, and itās not owned by anyone else, it could be bought by a competitor of yours. Any one of those thousands of page followers youāve made huge effort to acquire who clicks on āyourā website link will be taken to your competitorās website. They may even unknowingly make a purchase from your competitor thinking itās you.
You are literally providing your competitor or anyone else who decides to buy the domain with free advertising that THEY can make money from. YOU should be profiting from these efforts, NOT someone else.
So make sure to renew your domains ā and if you donāt use a particular domain any more, then you can simply remove them from your social media.
And finally ā¦
15. Do you have an āeyeā for design?
I think this one is about self-awareness ā¦
You are GREAT at what you do. Thatās why your business is successful.
But design simply isnāt everyoneās cup of tea, and thatās ok.
Having said that ā¦
Websites where colours are mismatched, text is misaligned, boxes arenāt centred ā¦
If it just looks a bit 90s or amateur ā¦
⦠it will turn potential customers off in a big way.
Thereās definitely an art to this that canāt be summarised in bullet points, but if in doubt ⦠get someone to help you!
Conclusion
I hope these hints and tips can help you spruce up your website design so that it attracts and engages your potential customers, and doesnāt put them off.
But I hear some objections coming ā¦
- I donāt have the āeyeā
- I donāt know how to make graphics look nice
- I canāt update my website ā I have to ring my IT guy to ask him to do it for me and he charges me each time
- I canāt afford a revamp
- I already have someone who works on my website (even if he or sheās not currently remedying ANY of these issues)
- I donāt know how to code
- I donāt have the time ā¦
As a small business owner, itās totally understandable that you may not have the time to get on this ā and itās totally understandable if you donāt currently have all the skills you need in-house and ready to get to work!
But thereās always help available! Iāve mentioned some free resources you can use to take action on these tips ā and you can always find people to help. Since this is something you KNOW you NEED, outsourcing may be the way forward!
You can do it! šŖš½