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Site Review

Start with what is getting in the way.

A Site Review is a low-pressure website audit for small businesses. We look at the website from a customer point of view, check the basics that affect accessibility, search, and speed, then turn the findings into a clear fix list and suggested rebuild scope.

What we check

We look for the places customers lose confidence.

A review is not just a scan for broken links. This practical website audit looks at what visitors need to understand, how quickly they can act, and where the website creates friction that can cost leads.

Review area

First impression

What a customer understands in the first few seconds, before they decide whether to keep looking.

  • Clear business type, location, and service area
  • Useful homepage structure
  • Current hours, menus, services, and photos
  • Reviews, proof, people, or project work

Review area

Customer paths

The practical routes people need when they want to call, visit, book, order, ask a question, or compare services.

  • Phone, form, address, booking, and ordering paths
  • Service or menu pages that answer obvious questions
  • Google Business Profile and local information alignment
  • Dead ends, buried links, and pages that create extra work

Review area

Mobile usability

How the site behaves for people looking quickly from a phone, often while they are ready to act.

  • Navigation, buttons, forms, and tap targets
  • Readable text and layouts on small screens
  • Keyboard access and form usability
  • Images, maps, embeds, and menus that still work on mobile

Review area

Technical quality

The behind-the-scenes website audit basics that affect speed, accessibility, search visibility, and confidence.

  • ADA accessibility checks
  • Basic SEO structure and metadata
  • Image sizes, page speed, and Core Web Vitals signals
  • Lighthouse performance, accessibility, SEO, and best-practices scores

You get

A plain-English fix list

You get

Audit scores where they matter

You get

A practical rebuild or cleanup scope

After the review

The recommendations should point toward real pages, not abstract advice.

A useful review connects findings to the page people actually see: menus, service areas, urgent calls, project photos, contact paths, and mobile screens. These examples show the kind of finished structure a fix list can guide.

You do not have to know what is wrong yet.

Send the current URL, what feels off, and what the website needs to help people do. We will separate urgent fixes from nice-to-haves and show what affects customer paths, accessibility, SEO, performance, and best-practices scores.