Website redesign for businesses stuck with a slow, dated site.
You already have a website. It loads slowly, it looks like the year it was built, and it is quietly losing you the customers who land on it. A redesign is not starting over from nothing. It is a full rebuild of the site you already own, keeping what works and fixing what costs you: the speed, the look, and the path that is supposed to turn a visitor into a booking. I start from a free teardown of your current site, so you know exactly what is wrong before you spend anything.
Signs you've outgrown your current site
It loads slowly
A slow site loses people before they ever see it. Visitors leave while it is still loading, and Google reads that speed as a reason to rank you lower. If your pages crawl on a phone, that is usually the first thing the rebuild fixes, because every other improvement only counts once the page actually arrives.
It doesn't work on a phone
Most of your visitors are on a phone, and a site built for a desktop makes them pinch, zoom, and give up. If your current site was never designed mobile-first, it is fighting the majority of the people it is meant to win. The rebuild treats the phone as the main screen, not an afterthought squeezed in at the end.
A dated look that undercuts trust
People decide whether to trust a business in the first few seconds on its site, and an old, dated design quietly tells them to keep looking. You may run a sharp operation, but a site that looks abandoned makes a visitor doubt it. A redesign brings the look back in line with the quality of the work you actually do.
No working booking path
The most expensive failure is a site that looks fine and still does not get you the call. Forms that go nowhere, a buried phone number, a booking step that breaks on a phone: each one sends a ready customer away. I rebuild the path to booking and test it end to end, on a real phone, before launch.
What the rebuild includes
A custom rebuild, not a reskin
This is not a new coat of paint over the old structure. I rebuild the site from the ground up, designed and coded for your business, with no theme or page builder underneath. That is what makes the speed, the search foundations, and the booking path possible, and it is why the result feels like yours instead of a template everyone else is renting.
SEO preserved and improved on cutover
The ranking you have built up is an asset, and a careful rebuild protects it. I map your existing pages to the new ones, keep your URLs and redirects in order, and carry your structure and metadata across so search engines recognize the site they already trust. Then I improve on that foundation rather than starting your search presence from zero.
A booking path that works
The rebuild is organised around the single action you need a visitor to take, whether that is booking, calling, or filling out a form. Every step is designed to move them toward it and tested end to end on a phone before anything goes live, so the path that was leaking customers on the old site is the part that works best on the new one.
You keep the number and profile live through launch
A redesign should never take you offline. Your current site, your phone number, and your Google Business Profile stay live and reachable right up to the moment the new site replaces the old one. The switch is a clean cutover, not a gap where a customer searches for you and finds nothing.
Case study: MBM Baseball Training
MBM's old site looked professional, and it was quietly costing Myles customers. Parents were filling out the booking form, and the requests never reached him. It never introduced him, either. No name, no face, no story. I rebuilt it around a booking path that actually works and a homepage that leads with Coach Myles himself.
I spent three hours on the phone with Myles getting it exactly how he wanted, and he controls every inch of it. Today, his Google Business Profile ranks first for "private baseball training long beach." That's what a website is supposed to do: put you first the moment someone's ready to book.
That's the case against a marketing agency. They sell you a template, bill you every month, and move on, and you're left paying for a site that looks finished and never does the one job you needed it to. You don't need an agency. You need a site that works, and someone who stays to keep it working.
Questions
Redesign or a brand-new website — which do I need?
If you already have a site and the problem is that it is slow, dated, or not bringing in customers, a redesign is the right call: you keep the domain, the content worth keeping, and the search history you have built, and I rebuild around them. If you have no site yet, or you are starting a new business from nothing, that is a fresh build instead. The work overlaps, but the starting point is different, and it is worth getting right. If you are starting from scratch, the new website design page is written for you, over at /studio/websites/.
Will a redesign hurt my Google rankings?
Done carelessly, a rebuild can lose rankings, which is exactly why this part gets treated with care. I map every existing page to its replacement, keep your URLs stable or redirect them properly, and carry your structure and metadata across, so a cutover preserves the ranking you have and gives the new site a cleaner, faster foundation to improve on. I will not promise a jump in rankings, because no honest builder can guarantee where Google places you. What I can stand behind is that the switch is built to protect what you have, not gamble with it.
How much does a website redesign cost?
A full redesign is the flagship build, a fixed $3,500–6,000, quoted after a free teardown of your current site so the number is based on your actual pages, not a guess. If your site is small and the job is genuinely smaller, the one-page build is the cheaper option, and the full menu is published on the pricing page. Either way the price is fixed and shown up front, with no retainer you cannot cancel.
Can you keep my current site running until the new one is ready?
Yes, and that is the default. Your existing site stays exactly where it is, fully live, while I build the new one in parallel. Your phone number and your Google Business Profile keep working the whole time, so nothing about your visibility drops during the project. I switch over only once the new site is finished, tested, and ready, and the changeover itself is quick enough that a visitor never lands on a broken or missing page.
What it costs
Book a 15-minute call- Starting from scratch? New website design
- Not sure yet? Free 2-minute teardown
- Keep the rebuilt site running: care plan
- Refresh the logo to match: brand identity
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