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Why your website isn't getting you calls

A website that never sends you a single job isn't broken luck. It is missing the basics that turn a stranger into a phone call. Here are the four to fix.

Short version

If your website isn't getting you calls, it's usually one of four things: nobody can find it, it loads too slow, it doesn't say what you do or where, or there's no easy way to call you. Fix those four and the phone starts ringing. No magic, no guarantees, just the basics done right.

A website that sits there and does nothing is one of the most common things I see. The owner paid for it once, a year or two back, and it has never sent them a single job. They figure websites just don't work. The truth is the site was never set up to do the one thing that matters, which is turn a stranger into a phone call.

I build websites for Las Vegas service businesses, from house cleaners in Henderson to handymen out in Summerlin, so I see the same four problems over and over. Here they are, and how to fix each one.

1. Nobody can find it

A website that doesn't show up on Google is a billboard in the desert with no road to it. If you search your own service plus your town and your site is nowhere, customers aren't seeing it either. This is the first thing to fix, and most of it is free. Start with our guide on how to get found on Google in Las Vegas.

2. It loads too slow

People on a phone give a site about three seconds. If yours is still loading, they hit back and call the next pro on the list. Slow sites are usually heavy with giant images or old, bloated builders. A clean, fast site keeps the customer there long enough to call you.

3. It doesn't say what you do or where

Someone landing on your site should know in one glance what you do and what part of the valley you cover. A lot of sites lead with a pretty photo and a vague slogan, and the visitor still doesn't know if you handle their job in their neighborhood. Say it plainly. "Pool cleaning across Spring Valley and Enterprise" beats "Quality you can trust" every time.

The one-glance test: show your homepage to someone for five seconds, then hide it. If they can't tell you what you do and where, your customers can't either.

4. There's no easy way to call

This one is simple and it's everywhere. The phone number is buried at the bottom, or it isn't a tappable link, or there's a contact form that emails an inbox nobody checks. On a phone, your number should be one tap, up top, on every page. Make calling you the easiest thing on the screen.

Once those four are handled, the next layer is making the whole page pull its weight. We cover that in how to turn your website into a phone that rings.

The honest part

No one can promise you a flood of calls or a top spot on Google. Anyone who guarantees that is guessing. What I can tell you is that a site nobody finds, that loads slow, that doesn't say what you do, with no easy way to call, will never ring. Fix those and you've done the part that's in your control.

If you'd rather not babysit any of this, that's the whole point of what we do. WebVegas builds and runs the site for you, fast, clear, easy to call, kept up over time, so you never log in. But these fixes work just as well if you'd rather handle it yourself. Either way, the goal is the same: a website that earns its keep by making the phone ring.

Preguntas

How long before my website starts getting calls?

It depends on how easy you are to find and how clear the site is. A clear, fast site that shows up on Google can bring calls in weeks, but steady work beats one big push. No one can promise a flood.

Is it my website or my Google listing that is the problem?

Often both. Your Google Business Profile gets you seen on the map; your website closes the visit into a call. Search yourself in a private window to see what customers actually find.

Do I need to pay for ads to get calls from my website?

No. Most local jobs come from the free map and the free search results. Ads are optional and separate. Fix the basics first.