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Website care plan

A website care plan keeps the site aligned with the business.

Most small business websites drift after launch. Hours change, services shift, photos get old, links break, and search-facing content stops matching what the business actually offers.

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

Maintenance

Website maintenance and support should cover the details customers see.

For small businesses, website maintenance is not only technical upkeep. Monthly website support can include the visible information that customers rely on before they call, visit, book, or request a quote.

  • Hours, menus, services, and pricing notes
  • Photo swaps and new proof
  • Forms, links, and contact paths

02

Updates

Routine website updates prevent stale pages.

A care plan creates a simple path for sending changes instead of letting small edits pile up until the site feels out of date again.

  • Text and image edits
  • Seasonal announcements
  • Service and location changes

03

Checks

Small checks can catch problems early.

Basic form, link, speed, accessibility, and SEO checks help catch issues before they become customer friction.

  • Broken links and forms
  • Basic accessibility and performance review
  • Page titles, descriptions, and search-facing content

04

Local

Website and Google Business Profile details should match.

Customers often move between the website and Google results. Hours, services, photos, service areas, and contact details should tell the same story.

  • Hours and contact alignment
  • Service and category consistency
  • Fresh photos and business details

Need someone to keep the site current?

Send the site and the kind of changes that come up most often. We will suggest a practical care rhythm.