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Do you actually need a new website? An honest checklist

Five questions that tell you whether to rebuild, patch, or leave your website alone and fix something else entirely.

Jamie Clarke

Jamie Clarke

24 June 2026 · 5 min read

I build websites for a living, so you’d expect me to say yes. But the honest answer is: sometimes a new website is exactly what you need, and sometimes it’s an expensive way to avoid the real problem.

Here’s how to tell the difference. Five questions.

1. Are people finding you but not enquiring?

Look at your numbers (Google Analytics or even your Google Business Profile insights). If you’re getting hundreds of visitors and a handful of enquiries, you’ve got a conversion problem - and that usually is the website. The message, the proof, the next step. A rebuild (or a serious refresh) will pay for itself.

If you’re getting 30 visitors a month, though? Your problem isn’t the website. It’s visibility. A shinier site nobody sees converts exactly as well as an ugly one nobody sees. Fix your Google profile and local SEO first.

2. Are you scared to touch it?

If updating a phone number means ringing a developer, waiting a week, and paying £80 - or worse, if a plugin update once took the whole thing down - the website has become a liability. Rebuild. Modern static sites don’t break, don’t need updates, and don’t hold you hostage.

3. Does it embarrass you?

Genuine test: when someone says “I’ll check out your website,” do you wince? Do you add “it’s a bit out of date”? Your website is your shop window and you’re apologising for it. That costs you jobs in ways you’ll never measure - people who looked and quietly moved on.

4. Has your business outgrown it?

The site says what you did in 2019. You’ve added services, dropped others, moved upmarket, changed area. If the site describes a business that no longer exists, it’s actively working against you - sending the wrong enquiries and repelling the right ones.

5. Is it slow on your phone?

Open your site on your phone, on mobile data, not wifi. Count the seconds. Past three, you’re losing people - and Google knows it too. Speed problems are sometimes fixable without a rebuild, but if the site was built on a creaking page-builder, a rebuild is usually cheaper than the archaeology.

The honest scoring

  • Mostly “no” - leave the website alone. Spend the money on visibility (SEO, Google profile) or follow-up (answering enquiries faster). Genuinely.
  • One strong “yes” - you might just need a patch: sharper message, better proof, faster hosting. A review will tell you.
  • Two or more - rebuild. It’s faster and cheaper than you think (ours start at £1,495 and take days, not months), and the difference compounds every month it’s live.

The wrong-order version of this is buying a website because it’s the visible thing, when the leak is somewhere else. It’s why we review before we build - and why we’ll tell you if a website isn’t what you need. Even though I build websites for a living.

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