Why Your Website and Listings Don’t Match (And Why That Costs You Calls)

Welcome back — or if this is your first time here, thanks for stopping by.

I look at a lot of essential trade business websites around Vancouver and the Lower Mainland, and there’s a problem that doesn’t get talked about much — but shows up all the time:

Everything exists…
but it doesn’t all match.

Your website, your Google listing, your ads, your social profiles — they’re all there.

But when someone actually tries to move between them, small inconsistencies start to show up.

And that’s often enough to cost you the call.


Where this usually starts

From a business owner’s perspective, everything seems fine.

Your phone number is on your site.
Your Google profile is set up.
Your social media accounts, too.
Your ads are running.

Individually, each piece works.

The issue shows up when a customer moves between them.


What this looks like in real situations

This isn’t about something being completely broken.

It’s about things not lining up the way people expect.

For example:

  • The phone number on your website is slightly different from your Google listing
  • Your business name is written one way in one place, and differently somewhere else
  • Your email or contact details vary depending on where someone looks

Or:

  • Your ad says one thing, but the page it leads to says something else
  • The service mentioned in the ad doesn’t match the page they land on
  • The location mentioned (like Vancouver vs New Westminster) doesn’t line up

Or even more directly:

  • Someone clicks your ad and lands on a missing (404) page
  • Or gets taken to a page that isn’t secure (no lock icon in the web address) or trusted
  • Or lands somewhere that feels unrelated to what they expected

None of these are huge on their own.

But they all happen at the same moment:
→ when someone is deciding whether to trust you enough to reach out


Why this matters more than it seems

When things don’t match, people don’t stop and analyze it.

They don’t think:

“This is probably just a small oversight.”

They think:

“Something feels off.”

And that feeling matters.

Because at that point, they’re not just choosing a service —
they’re choosing someone to trust with a job.


What goes through a customer’s mind

This is the part that’s easy to miss.

If your phone number, service, or details aren’t consistent, it raises a quiet question:

“If they can’t keep this straight… what else might be off?”

That doesn’t mean they think your work is bad.

But it introduces doubt.

And when there are other options one click away, doubt is enough to lose the job.


How this connects to everything else

In the previous posts, we’ve looked at things like:

This ties all of that together.

Because even if all of those things are working…

If the experience doesn’t feel consistent from one step to the next, people hesitate.

And hesitation at that point usually means they don’t reach out at all.


A simple way to check this

This one isn’t about testing your site in isolation.

It’s about following the same path your customers do.

Try this:

Search your business the way a customer would.

Click your Google listing.
Make sure your number and address are current.
Click your website, does it take you to the right page? Is there a lock icon in the address bar?
Look at your social profiles, does contact info match what’s on your website?
If you’re running ads, follow one of those through as well and make sure you end up where you expected.

Then pay attention to:

  • Does your phone number match everywhere?
  • Does your business name look consistent?
  • Do the services and locations line up?
  • Does each step feel like it belongs to the same business?

If anything makes you pause — even slightly — that’s the same hesitation your customers feel.


Why this gets overlooked

Most businesses set these things up at different times.

  • Website first
  • Then Google
  • Then social media like Instagram and Facebook business pages
  • Then ads
  • Then directories like Yelp

And over time, small differences creep in.

Nothing feels urgent enough to fix.

But together, they create a fragmented experience.


The takeaway

If you’re getting traffic but not as many calls as expected, this is one of the quieter things worth checking.

Not just whether each piece works.

But whether everything:

  • matches
  • feels consistent
  • and builds confidence instead of doubt

Because when someone is ready to reach out, even a small mismatch can be enough to stop them.


If you haven’t looked at your business this way before, it’s worth taking a few minutes to follow the full path yourself.
Most of these issues aren’t obvious until you see them from the outside.

IIn the next post, I’m going to go through something a lot of businesses run into:
when people visit your website but don’t call or message — even when they’re ready to — and what can quietly get in the way at that exact moment.

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