Structure
Homepage, service pages and contact details arranged around the paths a visitor actually takes.
For Irish professional practices whose site no longer reflects the quality of the work, or makes visitors piece too much together before they enquire.
For accountants, solicitors, advisers, dentists and other specialists, the website has to answer the questions a visitor brings with them: what you do, who it's for, where you work, what makes the practice credible, and how to begin.
Homepage, service pages and contact details arranged around the paths a visitor actually takes.
Plain, capable language about who you help, what you do and what happens next. It should sound like the practice on a good day.
Credentials, reviews, location, experience, process and enough specific detail to satisfy a sceptical reader and a search engine.
Six sample directions, from quiet and word-led to structured and clinical. Pick the one that feels most like your practice. The final site is built around you, not a template.
You might notice that service pages feel a bit thin, the homepage isn't quite clear enough, or simple updates keep getting pushed aside. The site still works, but it no longer gives people enough confidence before they get in touch.
I spent fifteen years marketing software companies. The bar for what a website should do has moved a long way. Most practice sites just haven't heard the news yet.
The details are agreed before anything starts, so the work feels manageable rather than open-ended.
Book a free consultation. We'll look at your current site together and explain what we'd change, and in what order.
Book a free consultation