They're on a phone, they've got something they want handled, and the fastest way to handle it is to talk to a person. If your number isn't sitting right there and ready to tap, a lot of them won't dig for it. They'll call whoever made it easy.
When someone's ready to hire a service, the call is the moment it happens. Google found that seventy percent of mobile searchers call a business straight from the search results, before a website is even involved. The ones who do open your site are running on the same instinct.
"A contact form sits in an inbox until someone checks it. A phone call gets answered now, and the customer with a problem knows which one they want."
→ The free audit checks whether your number's doing its job, along with the rest. Two minutes.
Quick disclosure. I do the marketing for Weblingo, so this is an ad. The call stuff I'm walking through is true whether you hire us or not, and the audit's free.
For most service businesses, the booking happens on the phone. Someone has a question about the job, the timing, or the price, and they want a person to answer it before they commit. A form can't do that. The call is where the decision actually gets made.
That's why phone leads are worth more than form fills. BIA/Kelsey, which has tracked this for years, found that businesses rank phone calls as their highest-quality, highest-converting leads, well above web form submissions. A caller is further along. They've stopped researching and they're ready to talk.
It holds across the trades. The medspa client calling to ask whether a treatment's right for her is most of the way to booking. The homeowner calling a roofer after a windstorm in Airdrie isn't comparison-shopping anymore, they want someone out there. For a lot of these calls, the person is ready to book before they've finished dialing.
"A caller has stopped researching. Deciding to talk to someone is most of the way to deciding to hire someone."
This happens on a phone, usually in the middle of something. Someone's looking up at a ceiling stain, or sitting in a parking lot deciding which dentist to try. The natural move is to tap a number and talk to a person, not type their details into a form and wait for an email back.
Google's research backs up the reflex. Seventy percent of mobile searchers call a business directly from the search results, before a website is even in the picture. The people who do open your site are running on the same instinct, and they expect calling to be just as easy once they get there.
The same study found that being able to call matters most right when someone's deciding. About half of mobile searchers said the option to call is important when they're close to buying, and roughly a third said they'd move on to a different business if calling wasn't easy. That last group never tells you they left. The phone just doesn't ring.
"When someone's ready to call, the site's only job is to not make it hard."
→ See how many taps it takes to call your own business. Start the free audit. Two minutes.
On most of the sites I check, the phone number exists. It's just in the wrong place, or it doesn't work the way a phone expects. The most common version is the number sitting only in the footer, so the visitor has to scroll the entire page to find the one thing they came for.
The next one is the number being plain text instead of a tappable link. On a phone, the number should be a tel: link, so one tap dials it. When it's just text, the customer has to select it, copy it, switch apps, and paste, and a number you can't tap is a number a lot of people won't call.
Then there's the site that replaces the number with a contact form, or buries it behind a "Contact" page. For a service business that's backwards. A form is a fine backup for someone who can't talk right then. It shouldn't be the only door in.
What good looks like is boring and obvious. The number sits in the top right of the header on every page, tappable. There's a call button in the hero next to whatever your main action is. On a phone there's a sticky call bar at the bottom so the number's always one tap away. None of this is a redesign. It's an afternoon.
"Most sites don't hide the number on purpose. They just never put it where the thumb was already going."
Making the number easy to tap solves the first half. The second half is answering when it rings. A site that finally makes calling easy, paired with a phone nobody picks up, just sends more people to voicemail faster.
This bites service businesses harder than most, because the calls land while you're on a job, under a sink, or with a patient. The customer calling about an emergency repair isn't going to leave a message and wait by the phone. Most people who reach a voicemail don't leave one, and a good share of them just call the next business on the list.
You don't need a call center for this. Some reliable way to catch the call when you can't answer, a forwarding setup, someone covering the line, or a same-day callback you actually stick to, turns the calls your site is now generating into booked work. Making the number easy to tap creates the call. Answering it is what turns the call into a booking.
"An easy-to-call number sends you more calls. Whether they turn into work comes down to who picks up."
Pull up your own site on your phone and try to call yourself. Count the taps, and notice whether the number's even on the first screen. Then run the free audit, which checks the number along with the rest of what decides whether a visitor turns into a booking. Both take a couple of minutes.
When we build a site or take one over, making the phone easy to reach and the number consistent everywhere is part of the job. If you'd rather not sort it out yourself, that's the kind of thing we handle.
P.S. This is the smallest fix in the series and one of the highest-leverage, because the customer already wants to call you. All you're doing is getting out of their way. Try calling yourself from your phone right now. If it takes more than one tap to dial you, that's the afternoon's work.