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Website Design Essentials That Get You Enquiries

SD
Sam Dominic
Founder, Cribbar Creative · 2 July 2026
A website design displayed across desktop, tablet and mobile screens representing the essentials every site needs

Putting a website online is not the same as putting a working website online. I see the difference every week -- a site that technically exists, has a home page, an about page and a contact page, and still produces nothing. No enquiries. No calls. No emails. Just a page sitting quietly on the internet.

The businesses that get enquiries from their website are not necessarily the ones with the biggest budget or the flashiest design. They are the ones that got a specific set of essentials right. This is the list I run through with every client before a single page goes live, and it is worth checking your own site against it today.

1. A Custom Email Address, Not a Free One

This is a small detail that quietly damages trust more than most business owners realise. If your contact page lists yourbusiness123@gmail.com or a Hotmail address, you are telling every visitor that you have not invested in your own domain. It is a free signal that reads as amateur, even when the business behind it is anything but.

A custom email address using your own domain, something like sam@cribbarcreative.co.uk, costs very little and is usually included with your hosting or domain package. It makes every email you send look like it comes from an established business, and it is one of the fastest, cheapest credibility wins available to any company with a website.

2. One Clear Call to Action Per Page

Every page on your site should have one obvious next step. Not three contact methods competing for attention, not a menu of options the visitor has to think through. One clear action -- usually a button that says something direct like "Get a free quote" or "Book a call" -- repeated wherever it makes sense.

Visitors do not read a website the way they read a book. They scan, they skim, and if the obvious next step is not immediately visible, they leave. A single, consistent call to action removes that friction entirely.

3. A Contact Form That Respects the Visitor's Time

Long forms lose leads. Every extra field you add is another reason for a busy visitor to give up halfway through. Name, email, and a short message field is usually enough to start a conversation -- you can gather the rest of the detail on the phone or over email once someone has actually raised their hand. We cover this in more depth in why shorter contact forms get more leads.

4. Genuine Trust Signals

Real photography, real reviews and real results do more for conversion than any amount of polished copy. A handful of genuine Google reviews displayed prominently, a short case study with an actual before-and-after, or a specific number ("over 1,000 leads generated for Cornwall businesses") all tell a visitor that a real business with a real track record is behind the site.

Five gold stars representing a genuine five-star Google review used as a trust signal on a business website
A handful of real reviews, displayed clearly, does more for conversion than another paragraph of marketing copy.

5. Mobile-First, Not Mobile-Afterthought

The majority of local searches now happen on a phone, often while someone is stood outside a job, in the car, or on a break at work. If your site was designed on a desktop monitor and only checked on mobile afterwards, it usually shows -- text too small, buttons too close together, forms that are painful to fill in with a thumb.

A properly mobile-first site is designed for the smallest screen first, then scaled up. That single decision, made early in the design process, changes almost everything about how a site performs.

6. Speed That Does Not Test Anyone's Patience

Google has measured this precisely: more than half of mobile visitors abandon a page that takes longer than three seconds to load. Compressed images, clean code and hosting that matches your site's needs are not optional extras -- they are the baseline. You can check your own site's performance for free using Google PageSpeed Insights, which is built on the same Lighthouse engine we cover in our guide to Google Lighthouse scores.

The Essentials at a Glance

EssentialWhy It Matters
Custom email addressSignals a real, established business rather than a free account
One clear call to actionRemoves the guesswork over what a visitor should do next
Short contact formFewer fields means fewer abandoned enquiries
Genuine reviews and resultsBuilds trust faster than descriptive copy alone
Mobile-first designMatches how most local searches actually happen
Fast loading speedKeeps impatient visitors on the page long enough to convert

Check Your Own Site Against This List

None of these essentials are expensive or complicated on their own. What makes the difference is having all of them in place at once, rather than most of them. A beautiful site missing a clear call to action underperforms a plainer site that gets the fundamentals right.

If you would like an honest read on how your current website measures up, our website design service starts with exactly this kind of audit -- a clear list of what is working, what is not, and what it would take to fix it.

Want an honest read on your current website?

Get in touch and I will take a look at your site against this exact list, no sales pitch, no jargon.

Get a free review