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    Home»Business»Think Your Website Needs a Refresh? Consider This First.
    Business

    Think Your Website Needs a Refresh? Consider This First.

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteMay 12, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Key Takeaways

    • Many websites underperform not because of poor visual design, but because they are passive. They present information instead of guiding users toward action or reassurance.
    • The traditional “brochure-style” website model is outdated. Attention is shorter now, so sites must quickly communicate relevance, value and trust rather than waiting for users to read and decide.
    • Improving performance is less about visible improvements or traffic; it’s more about clarity — defining what the business is trying to say, who it’s trying to reach and what should happen once someone arrives.

    Most companies believe their website is underperforming because of what it lacks visually. The more common problem is that it is too passive.

    It presents information, but it does not guide. It describes, but it does not reassure. It exists, but it does not do enough to move someone from interest to action.

    The website is no longer a brochure medium. It hasn’t been for some time. Yet many businesses still approach it that way — building stories, then assuming a visitor will arrive, read and then decide.

    That sequence no longer holds. Attention is shorter. Alternatives are immediate. The distance between interest and departure is measured in seconds.

    A static, well-designed website in that environment is not a signal of credibility. It becomes a waiting room with no one at the desk.

    The issue is not the design itself. It is what the site is not doing.

    Why the model stayed the same

    When websites first became a business requirement, they followed the logic of print. A company introduced itself, described its services and provided a way to get in touch. That structure made sense at the time. Presence alone carried weight. Having a website suggested legitimacy.

    That underlying model never really changed. It became more polished. Typography improved. Imagery became more refined. Language shifted toward abstraction. But the structure remained largely passive. Businesses describe themselves and then wait.

    That approach depended on patience. It assumed that a visitor would take the time to read, compare and decide. That patience has disappeared, but the structure designed for it often remains.

    What your website communicates without saying

    Every design decision makes a quiet argument. Before any copy is read, the structure of a site communicates what kind of attention a visitor can expect.

    A site that lists services without addressing uncertainty assumes the visitor arrived already convinced. A site that makes contact difficult suggests that engagement is not a priority. A site that has not been meaningfully updated in years signals something harder to recover from — not neglect of the site itself, but distance from the audience it is meant to serve.

    These outcomes are rarely intentional. Most websites are built at a moment in time, refreshed when they begin to feel outdated and otherwise treated as static infrastructure.

    Yet every site is continuously answering a question, whether it was designed to or not: Why this business, and why now?

    A brochure can describe. It cannot answer that.

    The wrong thing to optimize

    When founders begin to question their website’s performance, the conversation often turns quickly to traffic. There is an assumption that more visitors will produce better results.

    That framing places the problem in the wrong place.

    More traffic does not resolve a lack of relevance. More relevant traffic might. That requires understanding the person on the other side of the screen well enough that, within moments of arriving, they recognize something that reflects their need.

    That is a design problem. Not a visual one, but a problem of clarity and intent.

    What a website is expected to do

    Most redesign efforts focus on visible improvements. Faster load times, cleaner layouts, updated content. These changes address real issues, but they rarely engage with the more fundamental questions.

    • What is the business trying to say?

    • Who is it trying to reach?

    • What should happen once someone arrives?

    When those questions are not resolved, the website reflects that uncertainty. It may appear current, but it will not perform with clarity.

    There is also the matter of doubt. Every decision carries it. A site organized around description leaves that doubt unaddressed. That is not neutral. It introduces friction where clarity should exist.

    Businesses that see meaningful results from their websites are not always the ones with the most beautiful branding. They are the ones that understand what their audience needs to believe before taking the next step.

    Trust does not come from broad statements. It is built through specific, grounded signals. Evidence of outcomes. Clear articulation of value. A structure that anticipates hesitation rather than ignoring it.

    These considerations sit upstream of design execution. Without them, redesign tends to produce something more current, but not more effective.

    The more useful starting point

    It is easy to end this discussion with a list of improvements. Add features. Adjust layouts. Refine messaging. Those actions may be worthwhile. They are also often a way of avoiding a more direct question.

    What is the website meant to do, and has that been defined with enough clarity to guide it?

    Many websites were built quickly, shaped by loose direction and launched with the expectation that presence would carry some of the weight. When that expectation was not met, attention shifted to the surface rather than the underlying logic.

    A more useful starting point is more strategic. It asks for the user’s alignment before execution. It defines the role of the website before attempting to improve it.

    For a long time, the work was to make websites look like businesses. The work now is to make sure they behave like one.

    Key Takeaways

    • Many websites underperform not because of poor visual design, but because they are passive. They present information instead of guiding users toward action or reassurance.
    • The traditional “brochure-style” website model is outdated. Attention is shorter now, so sites must quickly communicate relevance, value and trust rather than waiting for users to read and decide.
    • Improving performance is less about visible improvements or traffic; it’s more about clarity — defining what the business is trying to say, who it’s trying to reach and what should happen once someone arrives.

    Most companies believe their website is underperforming because of what it lacks visually. The more common problem is that it is too passive.

    It presents information, but it does not guide. It describes, but it does not reassure. It exists, but it does not do enough to move someone from interest to action.

    The website is no longer a brochure medium. It hasn’t been for some time. Yet many businesses still approach it that way — building stories, then assuming a visitor will arrive, read and then decide.



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