A service business website that actually converts needs 12 specific things: a clear value prop above the fold, a phone number in the header, a single dominant CTA, social proof, a service area map, before/after photos, customer testimonials, an FAQ section, mobile speed under 3 seconds, schema markup, a chatbot or contact form, and a Google reviews widget. Most local service business sites miss 5 to 7 of these. Below I walk through each one with what good looks like and how to fix it fast.
How do I know if my website is missing the basics?
Quick test. Open your site on your phone right now. Set a timer for 5 seconds. Within those 5 seconds, can a stranger tell:
- What you do
- Where you do it
- How to contact you
If the answer to any of those is no, you're missing the basics. Most service business websites I audit fail this test. The good news is the fixes are usually small. The 12-item checklist below covers every one of them.
1 and 2: Clear value prop and phone number above the fold
The most important element above the fold is a value proposition in 10 words or less, plus a visible phone number and a single primary CTA.
The value prop should answer "what do you do and who do you do it for." Examples that work:
- Trusted HVAC repair in Orange County, same-day service.
- Family dentistry in Irvine, accepting new patients.
- Personal injury lawyer in San Diego, no win no fee.
Your phone number should be in the top right of the header, tappable on mobile, and visible without scrolling. If a visitor has to hunt for it, they leave.
3: A single dominant CTA
Pick one action you want visitors to take and make that the only button color that pops. "Get a Quote" or "Book Now" or "Call Now." If you have five different colored buttons saying five different things, visitors freeze and do none of them.
Every page should have one primary CTA repeated in three spots: hero, mid-page, and end. Secondary actions (like browsing services) can be lighter, smaller, less prominent.
4: Social proof above the fold
One line of social proof in the hero section dramatically lifts conversion. Examples:
- "Rated 4.9 stars on Google with 287 reviews"
- "Trusted by 500+ Orange County families"
- "Featured in OC Register, NBC News"
Specifics convert. Vague claims don't.
5: Service area map
Local service businesses need to make their service area crystal clear. A Google Maps embed with your service zone outlined, or a simple list of cities you serve, kills two birds. It tells visitors if you're relevant, and it boosts your local SEO.
6: Real before/after photos (no stock)
If you only have time for one upgrade, this is it. Real photos of your team, your trucks, your shop, and your work convert 2 to 3 times better than stock photos.
Buyers have been trained to spot stock photos in a millisecond. Stock photos signal "this could be anyone" which kills trust. Take 20 photos on your phone of your actual business, swap out the stock photos this weekend, and watch conversion lift.
Before/after photos are gold for trades, salons, dental, cleaning, landscaping, anything visual. They prove the work better than words ever will.
7: Testimonials that look real
Generic testimonials like "Great service!" do absolutely nothing. Specific testimonials with the customer's full name, photo, neighborhood, and a specific problem solved are gold.
Good example: "Sarah came out same-day for our broken AC in 100-degree heat. Saved our family. We're customers for life." Mike R., Newport Beach.
Bad example: "Great service, would recommend!" Anonymous.
If you don't have specific testimonials yet, ask three happy customers this week. Most will say yes.
8: An FAQ section that pre-answers objections
FAQ sections do two things. They reduce phone calls about basic questions, and they help your SEO because Google loves FAQ schema markup.
The questions should match what real customers actually ask:
- How much does it cost?
- How long does it take?
- Do you offer emergency service?
- What areas do you serve?
- What's your guarantee?
Don't make them up. Listen to your phone calls for a week and the questions write themselves.
9: Mobile speed under 3 seconds
Every extra second of load time drops conversion by roughly 7 percent. On mobile, where most service business visitors come from in 2026, sub-3-second load is the line between keeping visitors and losing them.
Test your site at PageSpeed Insights. If your mobile score is below 70, you're leaking visitors. Common causes of slow sites:
- Huge unoptimized images (compress to under 200KB)
- Too many third-party scripts (chat widgets, tracking, social embeds)
- Slow hosting (cheap shared hosts often have 2 to 5 second response times)
- Bloated page builders (Elementor, Divi, and old Wix sites are notorious)
10: Schema markup for local SEO
Schema markup is hidden code that tells Google what your site is about. It's why some search results show star ratings, hours, and service areas right on the search page.
Service businesses need:
- LocalBusiness schema (or a specific type like Plumber, Dentist, Electrician)
- Service schema for each service offered
- FAQPage schema on FAQ sections
- Review schema for testimonials
If you're on Wix or Squarespace, schema is limited. If you're on a custom build, you can add all of it. This is one of the unsung benefits of custom.
11: A chatbot or contact form (or both)
Use a contact form on dedicated contact and service pages because visitors who scroll there are higher intent. Use a chatbot or chat widget in the corner of every page to catch lower-intent visitors who have one quick question.
Even better, route the chatbot to an AI receptionist so calls and chats end up in the same place. That way the visitor who texts "what time are you open?" gets an instant answer, and the visitor who books an emergency call gets routed to the right person.
Why this matters
Your website is your most expensive salesperson. The 12 items above are the difference between a site that closes leads and a site that just exists. For more on the leaks, read why your business website is leaking leads.
12: A Google reviews widget
Embedding a live Google reviews widget does two things. It shows visitors fresh, real reviews they can verify. And it nudges new customers to leave a review because they see the widget and remember.
Tools like EmbedSocial, Trustmary, or a simple Google Places API embed do this in minutes.
What's the ideal page count?
For local service businesses, 6 to 12 pages is the sweet spot.
- Home
- About
- Services hub
- Individual service pages (one per major service)
- Service Area
- Testimonials / Reviews
- FAQ
- Contact
- Blog (optional but recommended for SEO)
More pages help SEO if each one is genuinely useful and well-written. Fewer pages are fine if you're brand new. Don't pad with junk for the sake of "more content."
The bottom line
Run through the 12 items above on your site this week. If you're missing 5 or more, you're leaving real money on the table. Fixing them isn't hard, but it's also not the kind of thing most template builders do well.
If you want a free audit of your site against this checklist, fill out the website intake form and I'll send back a free mockup of what your site could look like, within one business day. Also see my breakdown on custom website cost and the Wix vs Squarespace vs custom comparison.