Online Presence Check

A website you are proud to send people to starts here.

Send your business name and the public places customers see you online. Mike will look at your website, Facebook, Google profile, and contact options, then send back three practical improvements or the smallest useful next step.

No long checklistPlain-English replyReply within 24 business hours
01
First impression

Does what customers see online reflect the business you actually run?

02
Clarity

Can a customer understand what you do, who it is for, and why they should trust you?

03
What customers do next

Is the next step obvious enough that a potential customer can reach you easily?

What the reply looks like

Three observations you can act on.

This fictional service-business example shows the level of detail to expect. Mike reviews the public links you send, so your reply will be specific to what customers actually see.

Example reply

Online Presence Check

Plain English · No generic score
  1. 01

    Make the first screen specific

    What Mike noticed: A visitor can see the business name, but not the main service or where it is available.

    Practical change: Name the primary service and service area beside the first contact action.

  2. 02

    Move proof closer to the promise

    What Mike noticed: The strongest review and recent work are buried after several general paragraphs.

    Practical change: Place one real review and one finished-project example beside the service explanation.

  3. 03

    Give the next step one clear name

    What Mike noticed: The page uses several contact labels, so customers have to decide which one is meant for them.

    Practical change: Choose one action, such as “Request a Quote,” and use it consistently on the page.

If a smaller fix is more useful than a website project, the reply will say that.

What gets checked

Useful pieces, not a generic score.

The point is to find what would make your business easier to understand, trust, and contact. That may be a website, a clearer service explanation, a better Google profile, or a simpler way for customers to reach you.

Website or no website

Mike checks whether your current public home is helping the business feel real, clear, and easy to choose.

Facebook and Google presence

If those are doing the heavy lifting, the check looks at whether they give customers enough confidence and direction.

Reasons to trust the business

Reviews, photos, project examples, service details, location context, and signs of upkeep all matter before someone reaches out.

Easy contact

The check looks for places where a customer might hesitate, get confused, or give up before calling or requesting a quote.

Smallest useful next step

The reply is not a sales script. It gives three practical improvements or explains the narrowest fix that would help first.

Already know you need a build?

Use the project request form if you are past the check and ready to send scope, timing, and budget context.

Start a Project