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Website updates

Website updates should be simple before the site falls behind.

Not every change needs a new website. Sometimes the right move is a focused batch of website updates that makes the current site accurate and easier to use.

What matters

Useful pages are built from useful decisions.

These are the details we would look at before deciding whether the site needs a new build, a rebuild, a focused refresh, or a smaller round of updates.

01

Common updates

Small edits can have a real customer impact.

Hours, menus, service lists, photos, team details, forms, and contact information are often the details customers notice first when they are wrong.

  • Menu, hour, and service changes
  • New photos or project proof
  • Updated forms, buttons, and links
  • Clearer homepage or service-page wording

02

One-off

One-off website updates work when the site is mostly healthy.

A one-time update batch is a good fit when the site structure still works but the content needs to catch up with the business.

  • Changed offers or services
  • Updated seasonal information
  • Broken links or outdated embeds

03

Care plan

Recurring updates fit businesses that change often.

Restaurants, landscapers, shops, trades, and service businesses often need changes throughout the year. A care plan keeps those edits moving without a new project every time.

  • Regular menu, photo, or service updates
  • Seasonal content refreshes
  • Ongoing checks and small improvements

04

SEO

Website updates should protect search value.

Useful updates can improve clarity and local SEO, but careless changes can bury important content, remove helpful headings, or create broken paths. Even small edits deserve attention.

  • Keep important pages and links intact
  • Update metadata when page focus changes
  • Avoid repeated filler content

Have a batch of website updates?

Send the changes, links, photos, or notes. We will tell you whether it fits a one-off update, Site Care, or a larger cleanup.