Writing your own homepage is one of the hardest things a business owner can do. You know too much. You're too close to it. Every sentence feels either too vague or too boastful, and you end up somewhere in between, with copy that's technically accurate but not actually persuasive.
The good news is that effective homepage copy follows a clear structure. Once you know the structure, you're not staring at a blank page. You're filling in a framework, and that's a very different challenge.
Here's how to approach each section.
Start With the Three-Second Test
A visitor arriving on your homepage makes a decision in roughly three seconds. That decision is not "shall I work with this business?" It's "is this relevant to me?" If they can't answer yes to that question quickly, they leave.
Your headline needs to do three things plainly: tell them what you do, who you do it for, and where you're based (if location matters for your business). Not poetically. Not cleverly. Plainly.
"We help businesses grow."
Too clever:"Your story, amplified."
Just right:"Strategic marketing and website design for service businesses in Brisbane."
The "just right" version isn't poetry. But it tells the right person immediately that this is for them, and it tells the wrong person immediately to keep looking. Both outcomes are good.
Write the Subheadline for the Problem, Not the Solution
Below your headline, you have a subheadline or an introductory sentence. Most businesses use this space to describe their services. That's a missed opportunity.
Use it instead to describe the problem your client is experiencing before they found you. This creates instant recognition. When someone reads a sentence that describes their exact frustration, they feel understood, and that's the beginning of trust.
"We offer website design, SEO, and digital marketing packages for small businesses."
About the problem (stronger):"Most service businesses have a website that looks professional but doesn't generate enquiries, and marketing that happens in bursts when there's time, not consistently. We fix both."
Show the Transformation, Not Just the Service
When describing what you do, the instinct is to list your services. Resist it, at least in the hero section. Clients don't buy services. They buy outcomes.
Before you describe a service, describe what life looks like before it, and what it looks like after. Before: inconsistent marketing, invisible online, website that doesn't convert. After: showing up consistently, appearing in Google searches, getting enquiries from people who found you, not just people you already knew.
The service is the mechanism. The transformation is the reason to buy.
Put Social Proof Where It Counts
Most businesses put testimonials on a dedicated page that almost nobody visits. The instinct is to keep the homepage clean. But social proof on a testimonials page doesn't do much work for you. Social proof on the homepage, close to your call to action, does.
You need at least two or three genuine testimonials on your homepage. Ideally with the person's name, their business, and a photo. Specificity is what makes a testimonial credible. "Sarah completely transformed our online presence" is fine. "Within three months of working with Sarah, we were appearing on the first page of Google for our main keywords and had our first cold enquiry in two years" is far more persuasive.
Effective homepage social proof includes:
- Two to three testimonials visible without scrolling far
- Client name, business name, and ideally a photo
- Specific outcomes, not generic praise
- Your Google review score with a link to your profile
- Client logos if you work with recognisable businesses
Make Your Call to Action Specific
Your call to action tells a visitor what to do next. "Contact Us" is not a call to action. It's a navigation label. A call to action explains what will happen and why it's worth their time.
"Book a Free 30-Minute Discovery Call" is better than "Contact Us" because it sets expectations (30 minutes, free, a conversation), removes ambiguity about what happens next, and makes the commitment feel manageable. It should appear at least three times on your homepage: in the hero section, after your services section, and at the bottom of the page.
Link it directly to a booking calendar, not a contact form. Every additional step between intention and action costs you enquiries.
The One Thing Most People Forget
After you've written your homepage, read every sentence and ask: is this about me, or is it about my client?
Count how many sentences start with "We" or "Our." Every one of those is a sentence that's oriented toward you rather than your visitor. Rewrite each one to lead with the client's perspective.
"We create strategic marketing plans tailored to your business."
After:"You get a clear, realistic marketing plan built around your goals, with someone to make sure it actually happens each month."
The difference is subtle but consistent. "We" copy talks at the visitor. "You" copy talks to them. Visitors who feel spoken to are more likely to enquire.
A Simple Sequence to Follow
If you're rewriting your homepage from scratch, here's the order to work through: headline that names who you help and what you do, subheadline that names the problem you solve, brief description of the transformation (before and after), your core services with outcome-oriented descriptions, social proof with specific testimonials, your call to action with a direct booking link. Then repeat the call to action at the bottom of the page.
That's it. You don't need more than that to get enquiries. You need those sections to be written clearly, honestly, and with the client's perspective at the centre.