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Website & Systems Audit

Su Casa Handyman

A full review of your website, online presence, and lead flow. We looked at everything a potential customer sees when they find you - and identified exactly where you're losing business.

Website sucasahandyman.com
Owner Travis G.
Based in Taylorsville, UT
5.0
Google Stars
30+
Services
Yes
Licensed & Insured
WordPress
Platform
8
Issues Found

These are costing you leads every week

Your 5-star reviews are buried below the fold
Most visitors will never scroll far enough to see them.

You have a great reviews widget pulling in your Google reviews - and the reviews themselves are excellent. The problem is where they sit on the page. They're buried below the hero image, below your mission statement, below your core values, and below your service listings. Most visitors never scroll that far.

Your 5-star rating is the single strongest trust signal on your entire site. It should be the first thing visitors see, not the last. When someone lands on your homepage, they should see your star rating and a handful of real reviews within the first scroll - before they've even read what services you offer.

The fix: Move the reviews widget to directly below the hero section at the top of the homepage. Same widget, same reviews, just repositioned. This one change alone can increase the number of people who reach out by 15-20%, because you're buying trust in the first 5 seconds instead of hoping they scroll for 30. Also add the reviews widget to each of your service pages - a homeowner looking at your painting page should see reviews that mention painting.
Your contact form asks for 6 fields with no alternative
No text button, no call button, no email button - just a long form.

Right now, the only way for someone to request service is to fill out a form with 6 fields. There's no "Text Us" button, no "Call Us" button, and no "Email Us" button. Just the form.

Every extra field you add to a form reduces the number of people who complete it by about 10-15%. Six fields means you're filtering out a significant chunk of interested leads before they even say hello. And for homeowners browsing at 9pm on a Saturday - which is when most people are looking - there's no quick, low-effort way to reach out.

The fix: Add a "Text Us Now" button that opens a pre-written text message on the visitor's phone - they just hit send. Add a "Call Us" button right next to it. Put both of these above the form on every page. Keep the form for people who prefer it, but give visitors the zero-effort option first. On mobile, add a floating bar at the bottom of the screen so these buttons are always visible no matter how far they scroll.
Homepage is a wall of text that visitors won't read
Mission statement, 10 core values, and a philosophy section before any service info.

Your homepage includes a full mission statement, a philosophy section, and 10 individually paragraphed core values (Customer first, Equity and inclusion, Integrity, Honest, Reliable, Accountable, Continually improving, Service, Community, Goals, Fun!). This reads like an HR onboarding document, not a handyman website.

A homeowner who needs a TV mounted or a fence fixed has one question: "Can you do the job, when can you come, and are you any good?" They're not reading a values manifesto. Most visitors will bounce before they reach the service listings below.

The fix: Lead with what the visitor cares about: your services, your reviews, your before/after photos, and an easy way to reach out. Move the mission and values to an "About Us" page for visitors who want to dig deeper. The homepage should answer three questions in under 5 seconds: What do you do? Are you good at it? How do I contact you?
Location pages are copy-paste duplicates
Google sees identical content and may rank you lower for it.

Your Salt Lake City, Cottonwood Heights, Holladay, South Jordan, and other service area pages use nearly identical copy with only the city name swapped out. The strategy of having individual location pages is smart - it's exactly the right play for showing up in local searches. But Google sees duplicate content and may penalize your rankings, meaning these pages could be hurting your search visibility instead of helping.

The service listings, the "why choose us" paragraphs, the FAQ-style text - all of it is the same on every location page. A homeowner in Holladay reading the same copy they'd see on the Cottonwood Heights page doesn't feel like you actually serve their area. It feels like a template.

The fix: Each location page needs unique content - at least 300-400 words that specifically reference that area, the types of projects you've done there, and why homeowners in that neighborhood call Su Casa. If you did a fence repair in Holladay, mention it on the Holladay page. If you mounted a TV in a Cottonwood Heights condo, reference it. Specific, local content ranks higher and converts better because it feels real.

Worth fixing - adds up over time

All website copy is company-focused instead of customer-focused
Nearly everything starts with "We" instead of "You."

The site copy leads with what Su Casa does: "We take a very Customer-Centric approach," "We pride ourselves on being professionals," "We strive to run our business with integrity."

The homeowner reading this is thinking about their broken fence, their leaking gutter, their TV that needs mounting. They don't care about your approach in the abstract - they care about their problem getting solved.

Example: Instead of "We provide professional interior and exterior painting services" try "Ready to refresh your home? Whether it's a single accent wall or the whole exterior, a fresh coat of paint makes your home feel brand new - and we'll get it done right the first time." The test: Read each page out loud. If the visitor hears "you" and "your" more than "we" and "our," you've got it right.
No pricing information or budget tools
Visitors can't tell if they can afford you before reaching out.

There's no pricing information anywhere on the site - not even ballpark ranges for common services. For a handyman business where projects range from $150 to $5,000, visitors have no idea whether a TV mounting costs $75 or $300.

Showing ranges helps visitors self-qualify. The ones who reach out already know they're in your price range, which means fewer tire-kickers and more serious leads.

The fix: Add a "Pricing" or "What to Expect" page with ranges for your most common services. Even better: build a simple interactive budget tool where visitors can set their budget range, and the page dynamically shows which services fit within that budget. A homeowner who sets their slider to "$200-$500" and sees "TV mounting, fence repair, gutter cleaning, door installation" instantly understands the value and starts thinking about what they want done - putting them in a buying mindset before they even reach out.
Nextdoor responses are copy-paste identical
Every response says the same thing word for word.

Travis is active on Nextdoor, which is great - Neighborhood Favorite in Bentwood is real credibility that competitors can't buy. But every single response to every post is nearly identical: "I would love the opportunity to earn your business. I own and operate a full service handyman business. Please visit www.sucasahandyman.com..."

Neighbors notice when every reply is the same template. It starts to feel like spam instead of a real person responding.

The fix: Personalize each response to the specific request. Someone asking about TV mounting: "I can definitely help with that - usually takes about an hour depending on wall type and whether you want cords hidden. Want me to swing by this week?" Someone asking about fence repair: "I just did a fence post repair in Bentwood last month - fixed the whole thing in an afternoon. Happy to take a look at yours." Reference the specific service, give a detail that shows expertise, and make it easy to say yes.
Process steps exist but are buried and vague
Three steps on the contact page, hidden under the form.

You do have a three-step process outlined on the contact page - which is better than most handyman websites. The problem is it's hidden below the form, so most visitors never see it. And the steps themselves are a little vague - they don't give enough detail to fully set expectations.

For a homeowner deciding between two handyman services, the one that clearly explains "here's exactly what happens after you reach out" feels safer and more professional.

The fix: Move the process steps above the form, not below it. Expand them with specifics: (1) Tell us about your project - text, call, or fill out the form. We'll get back to you within 24 hours. (2) We'll review the details, ask any questions, and send you a clear estimate via email. No surprises. (3) Once approved, we schedule the work at a time that works for you. We show up on time, do the job right, and clean up after ourselves. Also give these steps their own section on the homepage - don't hide your process on a page people only visit when they're already ready to contact you.

Keep doing these things

  • Excellent Google reviews. 5-star rating with detailed, genuine reviews. Customers love your work and your communication. This is your biggest asset - it just needs to be more visible.
  • Dynamic reviews widget on the reviews page. The chronological display with real Google reviews works well. Now bring that same widget to the homepage and service pages.
  • Before/after project gallery. Detailed project case studies with real photos show your craftsmanship better than any marketing copy ever could.
  • Active on Nextdoor. Neighborhood Favorite status is real social proof that money can't buy. Travis personally responding to every request shows he cares.
  • Best of Salt Lake Magazine nomination. Legitimate third-party credibility that sets you apart from competitors.
  • Comprehensive service listing. 30+ individual services gives Google lots of specific keywords to index and gives visitors confidence you can handle their project.
  • License number displayed. Builds trust. Most competitors don't do this.
  • Regular blog and project posts. Active content creation puts you ahead of 90% of competitors who build a site and never touch it again.
  • Location-based service area pages. The strategy is exactly right for local search - just needs unique content per page.

Estimated Annual Revenue Leak

$24k - $72k
Based on buried reviews, a 6-field form with no alternatives, duplicate location pages hurting search rankings, and a homepage that bounces visitors before they see the good stuff.
At an average project value of $300-$800, even 3-8 lost leads per month adds up fast.
The bottom line: Su Casa Handyman has a strong foundation - excellent reviews, a real reputation in the community, an active owner who cares about quality, and a wide service offering. The issues aren't about what you do or how well you do it. They're about what happens when someone visits your website: they get hit with a wall of text, can't find your reviews, have no easy way to reach out, and leave without ever calling. Every one of these problems is fixable. The question is how much business walks out the door while they stay unfixed.

Let's talk about what to fix first

This audit identified 8 issues - 4 of them high-impact. A 15-minute call is all it takes to prioritize what matters most and put together a plan.

Text Alec
Or call: (385) 475-3525  |  alec@nuun.dev