What to Fix on a Confusing Website First
When a website feels confusing, the first fixes should reduce uncertainty for the visitor, not just make the design busier. Start with clarity, navigation, and page purpose.
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Articles from Best Website focused on website strategy. You’re viewing page 16 of 16.
When a website feels confusing, the first fixes should reduce uncertainty for the visitor, not just make the design busier. Start with clarity, navigation, and page purpose.
A services overview page should help a prospect narrow the field, not force them to compare a flat list of offers with no hierarchy. This article explains how to spot that problem and what a better structure looks like.
A homepage should orient the visitor, establish trust, and move the right people toward the right next step without trying to do every job at once.
A website audit should do more than produce a list of issues. This guide explains the decisions a good audit should make easier and why that matters more than raw findings.
A website usually needs help before it fully breaks. The early signs are confusion, drift, recurring fixes, weak pages, and a growing gap between what the business needs and what the site can reliably support.
A good website is not just attractive. It helps the right visitor understand the business, trust the next step, and complete the task that brought them there in the first place.