I’ll write the full homepage content now, organized section by section, SEO-optimized and written to convert.Here is what I did and why each decision matters for SEO and leads.
H1 targets three audiences in one sentence. Google needs to know who you serve. Putting “startups, small businesses, and e-commerce brands” in the H1 gives you a chance to rank for multiple search intents without separate pages.
The hero subheadline answers the two things every visitor wants to know: can you help me get found, and can you help me sell. It also confirms you work globally, which builds trust fast.
The stats row (27+ projects, 4 countries, 100% remote) replaces vague claims with numbers. Numbers convert better.
Each service card is written as a benefit, not a feature. “Clean code” alone means nothing. “Fast, mobile-friendly, easy for you to manage” gives people a reason to care.
The FAQ section is the most important SEO asset on the page. Google pulls FAQ content into featured snippets. The five questions I wrote match what people actually search before hiring a web designer. Use H3 tags for each question in WordPress.
The process section removes the biggest objection for cold visitors: “I do not know what happens if I contact you.” Four clear steps fix that.
The final CTA repeats the free audit offer with low pressure language. No commitment. No risk. That removes the last reason not to click.
Want me to write the meta title and meta description for the homepage next, or move on to a service page?