🔎 Six questions that reveal everything
1️⃣ Does a visitor know what you do within the first five seconds?
It’s called the “5-second test” and you don’t need to hire a research agency to run it. Send your website link to someone who doesn’t know you — a friend outside your industry, a distant acquaintance, a neighbor. Give them five seconds to look at the homepage. Then close the tab and ask them: “who is this and what do they do?”
If the answer is vague — you’re in good company. Most websites in Serbia and the region have headlines like: “Your reliable partner for business growth”, “Innovative solutions for modern business”, “Success that lasts.” These are sentences that could simultaneously describe an accounting firm, a marketing agency, an IT company, and a furniture showroom.
A message that tries to speak to everyone speaks to no one.
An effective homepage answers three questions within five seconds: who you are, who you help, and what result they can expect. Not what you do — what result you deliver. The difference between “we offer web design services” and “we build websites that generate inquiries while you sleep” isn’t just stylistic — it’s fundamental. One describes an activity, the other describes value.
If a visitor isn’t sure who you are and what you’re offering after five seconds — they won’t stay long enough to find out.
2️⃣ Does your website have a clear call to action — or just noise?
This is perhaps the most common mistake seen on websites across the region. Not the absence of a call to action — but the absence of clarity in them. On a single page you’ll find: “contact us”, “see our services”, “download the catalog”, “follow us on Instagram”, “read our blog”, “sign up for our newsletter”, “learn more” — and sometimes, at the bottom, in small print, “request a quote.”
Every one of those calls exists. None of them stands out. And the visitor, who has already used 4 of their 8 seconds of attention, doesn’t know what the most important next action actually is.
The problem isn’t the number of calls to action — the problem is the absence of hierarchy among them.
A complex business legitimately has multiple actions it wants visitors to take. But it must be clear which one is primary — the one that drives the entire page forward — and which ones are secondary, supporting that logic. When everything has the same visual priority, nothing has any priority at all.
The question you should ask yourself about every page isn’t “do I have a CTA?” — but “does a visitor know within three seconds what the most important next step I’m asking of them is?” If the answer isn’t immediately “yes” — the problem isn’t the button design. The problem is the logic of the page.
A clear call to action isn’t a luxury — it’s the basic infrastructure of every page that has a business purpose.
3️⃣ Does your website have a logical user journey — or is it just a collection of pages?
Imagine you’re a restaurant. A visitor walks in. Nobody greets them. The menu is in three different places. Prices are in one spot, dish descriptions in another, ordering happens somewhere else entirely. Nobody told them what the daily special is. They sit down, wait, don’t know what to do — and eventually get up and leave.
That’s exactly what happens on most business websites.
The user journey isn’t a trendy digital term invented by people with nothing better to do. It’s the logic of how a visitor moves through a website from the first click to conversion. And every step in that journey must be intentionally designed, not accidentally assembled.
Every business has its own version of that journey — depending on the industry, the complexity of the service, the length of the sales cycle, and the type of client being addressed. There’s no universal recipe that works everywhere the same way. But there is one rule that always applies: every page must have a clear role in that journey and must naturally lead to the next point.
The question isn’t whether you have pages. The question is whether they are logically and physically connected so that the visitor naturally progresses through a conversation with your website — or whether each page lives as an island of its own.
If Google Analytics tells you that the average visitor views 1.2 pages and leaves — they’re not leaving because you’re not interesting. They’re leaving because you didn’t tell them where to go next.
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4️⃣ Does your website tell the client why you — or just what you do?
This is the question that stings. Because the answer is, almost always — no.
The “About us” page on Serbian websites is a genre of its own. “We were founded in 2010. We have an experienced team of experts. We are committed to quality and client satisfaction. We strive to deliver every project with care and professionalism.” Every one of those lines could be signed by almost any company in your industry. And almost none of those lines tells the client anything useful.
The client who lands on your website isn’t interested in your history. They’re interested in one single answer: “why this company and not another one?”
That answer isn’t built in one single way — it’s built through a combination of what you’re willing and able to show, depending on the nature of your business and the clients you work with. Some companies openly share results and reference clients. Some companies have clients who prefer exactly that not to happen — because the competition is watching. Both are legitimate. But neither is an excuse for being generic.
Differentiation can be built without revealing what you can’t reveal. It can be built through the way you communicate, through the visibility of the personality behind the company, through the specificity of describing who you serve and what problem you solve — because people don’t buy from companies, they buy from people they understand. A sentence that concretely describes one problem your client has and that you solve is worth more than five paragraphs about values and mission.
A website that doesn’t answer “why you” can’t sell, even when the design is flawless.
5️⃣ Is your website consistently connected to your other channels — or is it sitting alone on the internet?
This is a question many companies skip because they think their website is self-sufficient. It isn’t.
A website that isn’t actively supported — through a blog that gets updated, social media that drives traffic to it, email campaigns that use it as a destination point, paid or organic channels that bring it visitors — won’t magically attract clients just because it exists. There are hundreds of millions of websites on the internet. Yours doesn’t become visible automatically.
Organic traffic doesn’t happen on its own. It’s the result of a system working in a coordinated way.
That means every blog post you write needs to have SEO value and lead the visitor further into a conversation with your website. That every newsletter you send has a clear page it leads to. That every ad has a landing page that continues the same conversation the ad started — not one that drops the visitor on the homepage and leaves them to figure it out. That your channels communicate one coherent story, not each their own version.
A website that isn’t integrated into the rest of your marketing system isn’t a digital sales tool. It’s a digital brochure waiting to be accidentally discovered.
The question you should be asking yourself isn’t just “do I have a website” — but “is my website actively receiving the traffic I’m sending it, and are we turning that traffic into a conversation?”
If you don’t have an answer to that question — you probably don’t have a system driving it either.
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6️⃣ Is your website technically ready — and can both people and AI find it?
This is the question that separates owners who have a website from owners who manage a website. And one that, in 2025, matters more than ever.
Let’s start with the technical foundation. A website that loads slowly, that looks broken on a mobile phone, that has broken links, forms that don’t work, or an expired certificate — that website doesn’t just convert poorly, it actively drives people away. Google rewards technical correctness in rankings. Users penalize slowness by leaving. And no great content can fix the impression left by a website that takes 10 seconds to load.
The second layer is SEO — and it’s not about “stuffing in keywords.” It’s about whether your pages are structured so that search engines understand who you are, what you do, who you’re meant for, and why you’re relevant to a specific search. Titles, meta descriptions, internal linking, loading speed, heading structure, alt tags — all of it together builds or destroys the visibility that brings organic traffic without paying for every click.
But here we arrive at a new layer that many are still ignoring: GEO — generative engine optimization for AI search.
More and more people today don’t open Google and type a word. They ask ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, or another AI assistant: “which company in Serbia does business design?” or “recommend me a company that sells bathroom equipment.” And AI doesn’t return a list of links — it gives an answer. And in that answer, it’s either you or someone else.
For AI assistants to know to recommend you, your website needs to be written in a way that AI understands — clear structure, explicit context, specific language, authority built through content and references. This isn’t sci-fi, it’s already a reality that’s changing the rules of visibility.
And measuring all of it — that’s where Analytics comes in. Google Analytics and Search Console aren’t options for advanced users. They are basic navigation: which page visitors are leaving from, which traffic converts, which keywords are bringing the right people to you, how much of your organic traffic turns into an inquiry. Without that data, every decision about your website is guesswork.
A website that isn’t measured can’t be improved. A website that isn’t technically sound can’t be visible. And a website that isn’t optimized for AI search is already losing traffic it doesn’t even know it’s losing.
🤔 What’s really happening beneath the surface?
Business owners who go through these questions and recognize themselves in several points usually react in one of two ways: they either say “I know, I’ll need a redesign” or they say “there’s something to that, but we don’t have time for it right now.” Neither answer solves the real problem.
Because the real problem isn’t design. And it isn’t content. It isn’t technology either.
The real problem is that the website wasn’t designed as a sales tool — it was designed as a digital brochure.
And a digital brochure and a sales tool look the same from the outside. Both have a logo, a menu, images, a contact page. The difference is in the logic hidden behind all of that. A brochure exists to inform. A sales tool exists to convert — to turn a visitor into a potential client, and a potential client into a client.
There’s an aspect that’s rarely mentioned: the trust that never gets built. Every time someone comes to your website and leaves unimpressed, they form an impression of your company. They might come back when they need you — but they might not. In an era where trust precedes every business conversation, your website is often the first decision point. And if that point doesn’t build trust — everything else runs uphill.
💰 What does a website that actually sells look like?
When we design a website at Skenderovic Consultants, we don’t ask ourselves “how will this look.” We ask “what needs to happen when someone gets here?” And the answer to that question dictates everything — from structure, to copy, to technical implementation.
A website that sells has several non-negotiable elements:
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A clear value proposition above the fold — before the visitor scrolls, they must know who you are, who you help, and what result you deliver.
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A hierarchy of calls to action — the primary action visually dominates the page, the others follow it logically; the visitor immediately knows what the most important next step is.
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A logical page structure tailored to the specific business — every page has a clear role in the user journey and leads to the next point, it doesn’t leave the visitor to figure things out on their own.
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Clear differentiation — an answer to “why you specifically”, expressed in a way that is authentic to your business and that respects what you can and are allowed to show.
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Integration with other channels — blog, newsletter, social media and ads that lead to the website as a destination point, not as a separate world that exists on its own.
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Technical soundness and loading speed — especially on mobile devices, where first contact increasingly takes place.
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SEO and GEO optimization — visibility in traditional search engines and in AI assistants that are increasingly becoming the starting point of search.
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Tracking and measurement — analytics tools set up and regular review of key metrics that enable decision-making based on data, not gut feeling.
This isn’t a list of requirements for an expensive project. It’s a list of criteria that every website with business ambition must meet.
“Your website works 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year — or it does none of that. There is no middle ground.”
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🏆 Conclusion
A website that exists and a website that sells can look identical. The same number of pages, the same images, the same contact number. The difference isn’t visual — the difference is structural, strategic, and measurable.
One company with a website similar to yours receives inquiries every month while they sleep. Another waits for the phone to ring and wonders why marketing isn’t working. The difference between those two companies isn’t the advertising budget. It isn’t the size of the team either. The difference is whether someone, at some point, sat down and asked the right questions — and then designed the website, approached it strategically, and connected it with other channels as an answer to those questions, not as a collection of pretty pages.
The six questions in this post are your quick audit. If you answered yes to at least three — you know what needs to be done. And you know that every month without change isn’t a neutral position. It’s an active decision to keep paying the price of a website that doesn’t sell.
The real question isn’t: “can I afford a good website?”
The real question is: “how much longer can I afford a website that isn’t working for me?”
👉 Schedule a free consultation — and in 30 minutes you’ll know exactly where your website is losing visitors and what the first step is toward a website that sells while you’re not watching.
🧭 Your business can create well-being – if you allow it to think more freely
In a world that is fragile, chaotic, and full of uncertainty, we see hidden potential. We help your business become a place of stability, innovation, and growth.
Many businesses and institutions today are stagnating in the face of rapid change, feeling changes catch up to them, and opportunities slip away.
That’s why we’re here. To be a beacon in the chaos and to collectively discover the purpose that makes your business unstoppable.
🔥 Dragica @ Skenderovic Consultants
Business design digital agency
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