Most business websites have one job: turn visitors into enquiries. And most of them are failing at it — quietly, invisibly, month after month.
The problem isn't usually that the website looks bad. The problem is that it's built to look good rather than to convert. There's a difference, and it's worth understanding.
The 5 Most Common Conversion Killers
Based on our work across 50+ businesses, these are the five issues we see most consistently:
- No clear call to action above the fold. If a visitor has to scroll to find out what to do next, you've already lost most of them. Your primary CTA — book a call, get a quote, contact us — should be visible within the first three seconds.
- Slow load speed. Google's threshold for acceptable page load time is 2.5 seconds. Every additional second of load time reduces conversions by approximately 7%. Most business websites load in over four seconds.
- No social proof near the top. Testimonials, client logos, and case studies should appear early in the page journey — not buried at the bottom after visitors have already decided to leave.
- Too many options. Giving visitors 8 things to click on is the same as giving them nothing. Decision paralysis is real. Clear, focused navigation with one primary action converts far better than a menu-heavy, cluttered layout.
- Not mobile-first. Over 60% of web traffic now comes from mobile devices. A website that isn't optimised for mobile isn't just losing UX points — it's actively being penalised by Google in search rankings.
What Good Conversion Architecture Looks Like
A high-performing website follows a logical emotional journey. The headline captures attention. The subheading builds interest. Social proof builds trust. The service description creates desire. And the CTA gives a clear, low-friction next step. Every element has a job. Nothing is there to fill space.
For Accounting Firms Specifically
Research from Unbounce across 57 million conversions found that professional services websites achieve a median conversion rate of 6.1%, with the top quartile reaching 14.1%. The gap between average and excellent is massive — and it's almost entirely down to website structure, not traffic volume. You don't always need more visitors. You need to convert the ones you already have.