I've built 19 free websites at this point. Not big corporate sites — small businesses, nonprofits, community orgs, immigrant-owned stores. The kind of places that run almost entirely on word of mouth and repeat customers.
Almost every client I've worked with said the same thing at some point: "We've been fine without a website." And for a long time, they were right. Referrals, foot traffic, regulars who just know to show up. It worked.
But something has shifted, and I see it firsthand now. There's a specific type of customer that a business without a website will never reach — not because the business isn't good, but because this customer will never find out the business exists.
The "verify before I go" customer
Think about how you decide to try a new restaurant or book a service you've never used. Someone recommends it. You Google the name. You expect to find something — a website, a menu, hours, a phone number, photos. If you find nothing, your brain immediately asks: is this place even still open?
That's the bounce. Not "they looked at the site and didn't like it." The bounce happens before anyone even considers going. The business never even got evaluated — it just got skipped, silently, and the potential customer moved on to someone with an online presence.
The business didn't lose on price or quality. It lost before the comparison even started.
A Google Business Profile isn't quite enough
I know what some people are thinking: "We have a Google Business Profile. Isn't that enough?" For some searches, yes — it helps. But a Google profile is controlled by Google, looks like every other listing, and can't tell your story. It can't show what makes your business different from the six other results in the same category.
A website is the one place on the internet you actually control. The one place where you decide what people see, what questions get answered before they pick up the phone, and whether someone feels like they can trust you enough to show up.
What I've seen after launch
I'm careful not to make promises about traffic or leads — I don't know your market, I'm not an SEO firm, and "results" depends on too many things outside my control. What I can tell you is what clients have told me after their sites launched.
The most common thing I hear: people start mentioning the website in conversations. "I found you online" instead of "so-and-so told me about you." That shift in how new customers arrive is noticeable — and it comes from a place that finally exists on the internet.
The cost question
I hear this too: "We can't afford a website right now." Which is exactly why I built Webspansion. The cost of not having one isn't obvious — it's invisible, it's the customer who bounced and never told you why. That's hard to see.
If you're a small business, nonprofit, or community organization without a website, applications are open. No invoice. No contract. Just tell me what you do and what you need, and we'll figure out if it's a good fit.