A bad website isn't free. It looks cheap on the surface — maybe you're paying $20/month for a template platform and think you're saving money. But that math only works if you're ignoring the cost of every lead your website is silently losing every single day.
Here's how to think about what your website is actually costing you.
The Invisible Daily Loss
Here's a simple calculation. Say your business gets 200 visitors per month to your website. If your site converts at 1% (which is low but typical for a template site with no optimization), you get 2 leads per month. If a properly built site converts at 4%, you'd get 8 leads per month. That's 6 additional leads you're losing — every single month.
If each lead is worth $500 to your business on average, a bad website that converts at 1% instead of 4% is costing you $3,000 per month, or $36,000 per year. The "cheap" $20/month website is the most expensive thing in your business.
Signs Your Website Is Bleeding Leads
- High bounce rate — visitors land and immediately leave (check Google Analytics: above 70% is a red flag)
- Slow load time — above 3 seconds on mobile means you're losing most visitors before they see anything
- No mobile optimization — if it looks broken on a phone, it's broken where most of your traffic is
- Unclear value proposition — visitors can't figure out what you do or why they should care within 5 seconds
- Generic stock photos — they scream "template" and undermine trust immediately
- Buried contact information — if the phone number isn't in the header, you're making it harder than it needs to be
The Fix Is an Investment, Not an Expense
A quality custom website built for conversion typically costs between $2,000–$8,000 depending on scope. That sounds like a lot until you do the math above. If fixing your website generates 6 additional leads per month at $500 each, the site pays for itself in 1–2 months — and then continues generating that return for years.
The question isn't whether you can afford to fix your website. It's whether you can afford not to.
What to Check Right Now
Go to PageSpeed Insights (pagespeed.web.dev) and enter your website URL. If your mobile score is below 70, your site is slow enough to be actively hurting your Google ranking and losing visitors. That's your starting point.
Then check your Google Analytics bounce rate. Then look at your contact form submissions from the last 3 months. If those numbers don't match what you'd expect for the traffic you're getting, you have a conversion problem — and it almost certainly starts with the website.
Ready to turn your website into a lead machine?
We build fast, custom websites engineered to convert — with the SEO, speed, and trust signals that turn visitors into customers. Free consultation, no obligation.