Creating Websites That Convert: Design Tips for Better Sales

POST:

Your website might look nice, but is it working for you?

We’ve met a lot of overworked business owners who feel like their websites are just… there. Not broken, not brilliant — just quietly underperforming while they hustle in every other part of the business. But here’s the truth: your website should be your hardest-working employee. It should attract the right people, guide them where they need to go, and turn casual visitors into loyal customers. If it’s not doing that, it’s time for a change.

Step 1: Understand Your Ideal Customer

The first step to building a site that converts is knowing who you’re trying to convert. What questions are they asking? What problems are they trying to solve? What kind of tone or approach do they respond to? Design starts here — not with color palettes or hero images — but with clarity. Tip: Use your homepage to speak directly to your ideal customer’s pain points. Make it immediately clear who you help and how.

Step 2: Guide, Don’t Guess

Visitors shouldn’t have to hunt for what they need. A converting website guides users through a journey — from curious to convinced — using strategic design and smart structure.
  • Clear calls to action (CTA) on every page
  • Logical page flow that mirrors your sales process
  • Navigation that’s simple, not clever
Tip: One page = one purpose. Each page should have a clear goal and a clear next step.

Step 3: Build Trust Before You Pitch

People don’t buy from websites. They buy from people they trust. Your site needs to show you’re credible, experienced, and ready to deliver — before you ever ask for the sale. That means:
  • Testimonials that feel real, not generic
  • Case studies or examples that show your results
  • Messaging that’s human, not hype
Tip: Photos of you or your team, videos, and personal touches make a big difference. Professionalism doesn’t have to mean cold.

Step 4: Design with Purpose, Not Just Style

Yes, your site should look great. But design isn’t just about looking good — it’s about function. Colors, fonts, spacing, layout — they all shape how visitors feel, how long they stay, and whether they take action.
  • Mobile-first isn’t optional anymore — it’s the standard
  • Speed matters — a slow site is a sales killer
  • Accessibility isn’t a bonus — it’s essential
Tip: White space is your friend. A cluttered site feels overwhelming, even if all the “right” content is there.

Step 5: Test, Track, and Tweak

The launch isn’t the finish line — it’s the starting point. Websites that convert are constantly evolving. Use analytics to see where visitors drop off, what they click, and what leads to conversions. Tip: Even small changes — like adjusting your CTA text or swapping an image — can lead to big results.

The Bottom Line:

If your website isn’t attracting and converting your ideal customers, it’s not doing its job. But that’s fixable. With the right strategy, design, and message, your website can become the hardest-working member of your sales team — while giving you room to breathe. Need help turning your site into a sales asset? Let’s talk. Richterworks Web 847-577-0491
Facebook
LinkedIn

Today, Aug 28, 2025, is Bow Tie Day

Quote for the Day:

“Summer has always been good to me, even the bittersweet end, with the slanted yellow light.”
― Paul Monette, Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir

Group Name for Today:

A Stench of Skunks

Upcoming Days:

Sept 1: No Rhyme or Reason Day
Sept 4: Eat an Extra Dessert Day
Sept 6: Fight Procrastination Day
Sept 9: Teddy Bear Day
Leah Richter

The Author, Leah Richter

Since 2004, I have been passionately creating websites from the design to the coding, to the content for businesses and organizations. I love web design even more than when I started.

I began with a Master’s Certificate in web design concentrating on coding and graphic design from an accredited online school and have added 20 years of experience and a boat-load of additional courses over the years. I offer my clients education, experience and expertise- and a sense of humor.

Skip to content