Your website might look the part. It might even tick all the basic boxes. But is it doing its job?
That job is to bring in leads, win instructions and support your business every single day. If it is not doing that, it is underperforming. And the sooner you spot it, the easier it is to put right.
Here is how to assess the health of your website and what to do if it is not pulling its weight.
Before making any assumptions, look at the data. You do not need to be a full-time analyst, but you do need to know what to look for.
Key metrics to check:
These metrics will give you an honest picture of how well your site is performing. If traffic is low, engagement is poor or conversions are rare, it is a sign that something is off.
Heatmaps, session recordings and user feedback can help you understand what people are actually doing on your site.
Try using:
This kind of insight helps you spot friction points, broken journeys or unclear messaging. It shows you what is working and what is not, from the user’s perspective.
Look at a few competitor websites and ask:
You are not aiming to copy them. You are aiming to understand how you compare. If your site feels noticeably behind, it may be time to refresh it.
Speed and SEO play a huge part in how your site performs. Use tools such as:
If your site is slow, unresponsive or poorly structured, it will struggle to rank and convert, no matter how good the content is.
Most of your users are visiting from a mobile device. If your site is hard to use on a phone, you are losing leads.
Check:
If you are not regularly checking your mobile site yourself, now is the time to start.
This is the most important check of all.
Ask your team:
If your site is not generating enough business, then no matter how well it is built, something needs to change.
Once you know there is an issue, the next step is action. You might need a full redesign, but in many cases, small improvements go a long way.
Start by:
It is also worth running a structured review, such as Homeflow’s Site Doctor, to get a professional opinion on where your site can improve.
A modern estate agency website should not just exist. It should perform. If your site is not delivering leads, supporting your team or showing your brand at its best, it is not doing its job.
The good news is, performance problems can be fixed. It starts with asking the right questions and taking a clear, honest look at how your site is working today.
Once you know what needs to change, you can start building something better.