Let's start with what a trade website needs to do. Its job is simple: convince someone who's found you online that you're trustworthy and competent, then make it as easy as possible for them to contact you. That's it. It doesn't need animations, it doesn't need a blog with 500 articles, and it definitely doesn't need a stock photo of people in hard hats shaking hands. It needs to load fast, look professional, show your work, and put your phone number where people can see it.
Mobile matters more than anything else for trades. Over 70% of "near me" searches happen on mobile. Someone's boiler has broken, they're standing in their kitchen, and they're searching on their phone. If your website doesn't work properly on that phone — if it's slow, if the text is too small, if they have to pinch and zoom to find your number — they'll hit the back button and call whoever comes up next. We've audited hundreds of trade websites and mobile issues are the single biggest source of lost leads.
Speed is the second most common problem. Every second your website takes to load costs you roughly 7% of your visitors. A site that takes 5 seconds to load on mobile has already lost a third of the people who clicked on it. The main culprits are usually uncompressed images (that photo of your van doesn't need to be 4MB), cheap hosting, and bloated website builders that load dozens of scripts before anything appears on screen. A well-built trade website should load in under 2 seconds.
Your phone number should be visible without scrolling on every page. This sounds obvious, but you'd be amazed how many trade websites bury their contact details at the bottom of the page or hide them behind a "Contact Us" menu item. On mobile, a click-to-call button that's always visible is the single highest-converting element you can have. If someone has to hunt for your number, a meaningful percentage of them won't bother.
Photos of your actual work outperform stock imagery every single time. Real photos build trust in a way that generic images simply can't. Before-and-after shots are particularly effective for trades — a bathroom refit, a rewired consumer unit, a landscaped garden. They prove you do what you say you do. You don't need a professional photographer; modern phone cameras are more than good enough. Just make sure the images are compressed for web so they don't slow your site down.
Contact forms are worth having alongside your phone number, but they need to work properly. We regularly test trade websites where the contact form either doesn't send, sends to an email address the owner never checks, or is so long that nobody fills it in. A good trade contact form has four fields maximum: name, phone number, email, and a message box. Anything more than that and your completion rate drops sharply. And always, always test your form by submitting it yourself.
The articles below cover all of these topics in detail, along with specific guidance on what makes visitors trust a trade website, how to structure your pages for maximum conversions, and common mistakes that are easy to fix once you know they're there. Everything is based on real data from auditing trade websites across the UK — not theory, not guesswork, but what actually moves the needle for businesses like yours.
One final thought: your website doesn't need to be expensive. A clean, fast, mobile-friendly site with your services, areas, photos, reviews, and a prominent phone number will outperform a £5,000 custom build that's slow and hard to navigate. Focus on the fundamentals and you'll be ahead of 80% of your competitors.
Articles in This Guide
Read in any order, or start from the top and work your way through.
Articles for this guide are coming soon.
Frequently Asked Questions
Straight answers — no jargon.
How much should a trade website cost?
A good trade website shouldn't cost thousands. You need a clean, fast, mobile-friendly site that shows what you do, where you work, and how to contact you. Expect to pay £150-500 for a well-built site from someone who understands trades, or less if you use a good template. Avoid agencies that charge £2,000+ for a basic brochure site — you're paying for their overheads, not a better website.
Do I really need a website if I get all my work from word of mouth?
Word of mouth is brilliant, but here's what happens: someone recommends you, the first thing that person does is Google your name. If they find a professional website with photos of your work and good reviews, that recommendation is confirmed. If they find nothing, or a dodgy-looking site, some of them will hesitate. A website doesn't replace word of mouth — it reinforces it.
What's more important — how my website looks or how fast it loads?
Speed, every time. A plain-looking website that loads in 1 second will generate more calls than a beautiful website that takes 5 seconds. Most visitors decide within 2-3 seconds whether to stay or leave. If your site hasn't loaded by then, they never even see your design. That said, a fast AND good-looking site is obviously the goal — but if you have to choose, prioritise speed.
Should my trade website have a blog?
Only if you'll actually keep it updated. A blog with two posts from 2022 looks worse than no blog at all — it makes your business look inactive. If you're willing to write one useful article a month (common questions customers ask, project case studies, seasonal tips), a blog can help with SEO and build trust. If you're not, don't bother. Focus on getting your core pages right instead.
How can I tell if my website is losing me customers?
Run your website through Google PageSpeed Insights (free) and check your mobile score. If it's below 50, you're losing visitors to slow loading. Try filling in your own contact form on your phone — does it work? Can you find your phone number within 2 seconds of the page loading? Try loading your site on 4G rather than WiFi. If any of these feel clunky or slow, your customers are experiencing the same thing and some of them are leaving.
Ready to Get Started?
We'll audit your online presence for free and show you exactly where you're losing customers. No obligation, no hard sell.