Most business owners have a rough sense of whether their website looks professional. Far fewer have any reliable sense of whether it is actually generating a return. The two things are not the same, and the gap between them is where a significant amount of business investment quietly disappears.
Wesley Cude, founder of WordPress agency Cude Design, has worked with UK businesses on their websites for over fifteen years. “The question we get asked most often is not how to build a website, it is why the website they already have is not doing more for the business,” he says. “In most cases the answer is not that the site needs replacing. It is that nobody has set up the tools to understand what it is and is not doing, so nobody knows where to focus.”
Understanding whether a website is working requires measuring the right things. This guide covers the metrics that matter, the free tools available to track them, and the signs that a website is underperforming in ways that are costing the business real money.
Start With the Right Question
The first step is defining what working actually means for your specific business. A website that generates ten enquiries a month from qualified prospects might be performing exceptionally well for a solicitor charging several hundred pounds per hour. The same number would represent poor performance for an eCommerce retailer hoping to process hundreds of transactions per week.
Before looking at any data, write down the specific commercial outcomes you want the website to produce. Inbound enquiry calls. Contact form submissions. Online orders. Newsletter sign-ups. Appointment bookings. Whitepaper downloads. The answer will be different for every business but there should always be a clear answer. A website without a defined commercial purpose cannot be evaluated and cannot be improved in any meaningful direction.
The Tools You Need and What They Tell You
Two free tools from Google provide the core data every business website owner needs. Neither requires technical expertise to set up or to read, and both are significantly underused by small and medium-sized businesses.
Google Search Console shows how your website performs in Google search results. It tells you which search terms your site appears for, how many times it appears, how many people click through to the site from those results, and the average position your pages occupy in the results. This data is the foundation of understanding whether the site is visible to the right audience. A business that appears for irrelevant terms, or that appears for relevant terms but at positions too low to attract clicks, has a search visibility problem that no amount of design improvement will address.
Google Analytics shows what happens once visitors arrive on the site. How many people visit each week, where they came from, which pages they look at, how long they spend on the site, and whether they take any of the actions you have defined as valuable. The combination of Search Console and Analytics gives a picture that runs from initial search query all the way through to on-site behaviour and conversion.
Both tools are free, both connect to your website through a single snippet of code or a plugin, and both start generating useful data from the day they are installed. A business that has had its website for several years without either tool in place has been flying blind throughout that period.
What Good Performance Actually Looks Like
Traffic volume is the metric most business owners focus on first, but it is rarely the most useful starting point. A website receiving five hundred visitors a month and converting three percent of them into enquiries is performing better commercially than one receiving five thousand visitors and converting zero point one percent. The conversion rate is almost always more important than the raw traffic number.
For a service business, conversion means a visitor taking a contact action. Calling the phone number displayed on the site, submitting the contact form, clicking an email link, or booking an appointment through an online calendar. Google Analytics can be configured to track all of these as goal completions, giving you a percentage that represents the proportion of visitors who take a meaningful commercial step.
A conversion rate below one percent for a service business website generally indicates a problem with the page content, the calls to action, the speed and usability of the site, or the match between the traffic arriving and the service being offered. Each of those is diagnosable and fixable once the data is available.
The Signs That a Website Is Underperforming
High bounce rate on key pages. If visitors are landing on a service page and leaving immediately without visiting any other page, the content is not matching what they were looking for or the page is not loading quickly enough to hold their attention. A bounce rate above seventy percent on commercial pages warrants investigation.
Traffic that does not convert. If the site is receiving consistent traffic but generating no enquiries, the disconnect is usually in the conversion pathway rather than the traffic itself. Visitors are finding the site but not finding a reason to make contact. This is usually a call to action problem, a trust problem, or a mismatch between what the page promises and what it delivers.
Traffic from irrelevant terms. Search Console sometimes reveals that a site is receiving significant traffic from search terms that have nothing to do with the business. This traffic inflates visitor numbers without contributing to commercial outcomes and can mask underlying performance problems. A solicitor receiving thousands of visits from people searching for legal document templates is not getting business from that traffic.
No traffic from commercial terms. The inverse problem is equally common. A business that serves a specific geographic area or industry receives no traffic from the search terms people in that area or industry would use to find the relevant service. This indicates a search visibility problem that requires either content or authority improvements to address.
What to Do With What You Find
The value of measurement is not the data itself but the decisions it enables. A business that discovers its website converts at half a percent when the industry average is two percent has a clear priority: understand why visitors are not converting and fix it. A business that discovers it ranks on page four for its most important search term has a clear priority: understand what the pages ranking above it have that it does not, and address the gap.
Neither of these requires a full website rebuild in most cases. Conversion rate problems are usually addressed through content changes, call to action improvements, and page speed optimisation. Search ranking problems are usually addressed through content quality improvements, structured data implementation, and building the external authority signals that search engines use to determine which pages deserve to rank.
The common thread is that both types of problem require data to diagnose accurately. Without measurement, improvement efforts are guesswork. With it, they become straightforward decisions about where to focus time and investment to generate the most measurable commercial return.
Setting a Baseline and Reviewing Regularly
Once Google Search Console and Google Analytics are in place, the most useful habit is a monthly review of the core metrics. Traffic volume and source, conversion rate on key pages, search terms generating impressions and clicks, and any significant changes from the previous month. This review does not need to take more than thirty minutes. What it provides is a clear, consistent picture of whether the website is moving in the right direction and where the next area of focus should be.
A business website that is reviewed monthly, with clear commercial objectives defined and data in place to measure progress against them, will consistently outperform one that was built carefully and then left to run without oversight. The website is not a finished product. It is an ongoing commercial asset that responds to attention in proportion to the quality of that attention.
About the Author
Wesley Cude is the founder of Cude Design, a WordPress and web design agency based in Leatherhead, Surrey, working with businesses across London and the UK.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.









































































