How to Write Website Copy That Actually Sells

A Practical Guide for Non-Writers and Business Owners

Whether you’re launching your first product or trying to improve an underperforming website, one thing is clear: your website copy matters more than you think.

Great design attracts attention — but words do the selling.

If your visitors are not turning into customers, the problem might not be your product or your offer — it might just be the way you’re explaining it.

Article Summary: What You’ll Learn

Why Website Copy Matters More Than You Think

Think of your website as your 24/7 salesperson.
Now imagine that salesperson mumbling, rambling, or using buzzwords no one understands. That’s what bad copy does.

Good copy, on the other hand:

  • Explains clearly who you are and what you do
  • Creates trust and interest in seconds
  • Makes your visitor feel like this is exactly what they’ve been looking for
  • Encourages action — like buying, booking, or contacting

The #1 Rule: Talk Like a Human, Not a Brochure

Many websites use corporate or “professional” language that ends up sounding cold, vague, or generic.

❌ Example of Bad Copy:

“We offer world-class solutions for optimizing operational efficiency across verticals.”

✅ Example of Good Copy:

“We help small businesses run smoother — with smart tools and friendly support.”

Tip:
Pretend you’re talking to a curious, smart 12-year-old. Would they understand what your website is about?

Write for the Visitor’s Stage in the Journey

People visit websites at different stages of awareness. Your copy should guide them regardless of where they land:

Visitor StageWhat They’re ThinkingCopy Strategy
Cold Visitor“What is this?”Explain simply and quickly what you do
Curious Visitor“Is this for me?”Highlight benefits and show social proof
Interested Buyer“Can I trust this?”Show results, testimonials, guarantees
Ready to Act“What’s next?”Use strong, obvious calls to action

Checklist: What to Include On Each Page

Home Page
  • 1-line pitch in plain language
  • Who it’s for and how it helps
  • Clear primary CTA
  • Trust badges (clients, certifications, ratings)

About Page
  • Who you are (authentic, not buzzwords)
  • Why you care about solving this problem
  • Personal story or credentials
  • A soft CTA (connect, read more, etc.)

Services/Product Page
  • Describe each offer clearly
  • Focus on benefits, not features
  • Use bullet points for clarity
  • Include pricing (if applicable)
  • Strong CTA

Contact Page
  • Simple form or email
  • Add other channels (WhatsApp, phone, etc.)
  • Reassure: “We’ll respond within 24 hours”

What to Ask from Your Web Developer or Content Writer

If you’re not writing the copy yourself, here’s what to demand from whoever is helping you:

  • Do they understand your audience, not just your product?
  • Are they writing in plain, human-first language?
  • Are the CTAs clear and visible on every page?
  • Will the copy be tested and revised based on performance?

Deliverables Checklist:

✅ A headline and sub-headline for every page
✅ Copy structured using sections and headings (not a wall of text)
✅ At least 1 CTA per page
✅ SEO meta titles + descriptions (if they offer that)
✅ Mobile-friendly text formatting (no tiny fonts or long paragraphs)

How to Know If It’s Working

Once your new copy is live, don’t guess — check the numbers.

Here’s what to monitor:

MetricWhat It Means
Bounce RateAre people leaving immediately? Too high means unclear messaging.
Time on PageLow = boring or confusing copy
Click-through Rate (CTR)Are people clicking your CTA?
Conversion RateAre they buying, signing up, or booking?

Use tools like:

  • Google Analytics (for behavior)
  • Hotjar or Microsoft Clarity (for visitor recordings)
  • Simple surveys or polls (“What’s missing?”)

Final Thoughts

You don’t need to be a great writer to write great copy.

You just need to understand your customer and speak their language.

And if you’re hiring help — copywriters, developers, or agencies — make sure they do too.

Need help fixing your website copy?
Book a quick 30-minute consultation and I’ll walk through your homepage with you — and suggest what to improve for better results.