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April 23, 2024

25 Questions Your Website Should Answer Better Than AI

In 2026, your website is not competing only with other websites. It is also competing with AI answers, zero click summaries, and people who want quick decisions. That is why your site must do one thing clearly.

It must answer the questions your buyers are already thinking, in a way that feels real, specific, and trustworthy.

AI can explain marketing concepts. But it cannot explain your exact process, your exact offer, your exact results, your timelines, your pricing logic, and why you are a safe choice. That is your advantage.

This blog is a ready list of 25 website questions that help you turn visitors into leads. If you answer these properly, you will get more enquiries, better quality calls, and less back and forth on WhatsApp and email.

These questions work for service businesses, coaches, agencies, SaaS, and local brands. If you run a business website and you want growth, start here.

1. Who is this for, and who is it not for

Your website should clearly say who you help, and what kind of client is a poor fit. This builds trust because it shows you have standards. It also improves lead quality because wrong people will self filter. Add a simple example like, “Best for founders who want leads in 90 days, not for people looking for one post design.”

2. What problem do you solve in one line

Most websites talk about services. Buyers care about outcomes. Write one clear line that connects your service with a result, like more enquiries, better conversions, or stronger brand trust. Keep it specific and easy to understand.

3. What is your main offer, and what exactly is included

People leave websites when they are confused. Your offer page should list what they get, how many deliverables, what platforms, what timeline, and what support. If you offer packages, show what changes from one package to another.

4. What results can I expect, and how long does it usually take

Avoid fake promises. Instead, set realistic expectations. Explain what results depend on, like budget, market, existing content, or website quality. Add a simple timeline like, “Week 1 setup, week 2 launch, week 3 optimisation, month 2 scaling.”

5. What makes you different from others doing the same thing

Do not say “we are best” or “we are creative.” Say your real differentiator. Maybe you do strategy first, maybe you focus on conversion not vanity metrics, maybe you give weekly reporting, maybe you have a clean content system. One strong differentiator is better than five weak ones.

6. What is your process, step by step

A website should reduce fear. Buyers want to know what happens after they pay. Add a simple process like discovery, strategy, execution, review, reporting, optimisation. People trust you more when they can see the journey.

7. What do you need from me to start

This saves a lot of time. Mention what you need, like brand access, website access, past performance data, product details, offers, and target location. It also shows you are organised and professional.

8. How do you measure success

Many clients have different ideas of success. Your site should define it. For example, for ads it can be cost per lead and conversion rate, for SEO it can be impressions and keyword growth, for content it can be enquiries and profile visits. Clear success metrics reduce misunderstandings later.

9. What does a good lead look like for your business

This question is gold for agencies and consultants. If you define a good lead, you can build the right funnel. Add examples like, “A good lead is a founder with a clear offer, ready to invest for growth, and willing to follow a plan.”

10. Why is my marketing not working right now

Your website should educate without blaming the visitor. Common reasons include weak offer, unclear messaging, inconsistent posting, poor website conversion, wrong targeting, or no follow up system. A short section like this builds authority and makes people think, “They understand my situation.”

11. Do I need SEO, ads, or social media first

Most businesses waste money because they pick the wrong first step. Your site can guide them. For example, ads work faster when the offer and landing page are strong. SEO works best when you can publish consistently. Social works best when content has clear positioning and CTA.

12. What is the best marketing channel for my industry

You can answer this with simple direction. Coaches may do best on Instagram and LinkedIn. Local businesses may do best with Google Business Profile and local SEO. Ecommerce may need performance ads and email flows. If you explain this clearly, the reader feels helped, not sold.

13. What will you do in the first 7 days

This is a trust question. People want quick clarity. Tell them what you do first, like audit, strategy, tracking setup, content plan, creative direction, landing page fixes, and reporting setup. Even if results take time, action builds confidence.

14. How do you create content that actually brings enquiries

Most content gets likes but no leads. Explain your approach simply, hook, value, proof, CTA, and repetition. Show that content is not random posting, it is a system. This is where Kodo Kompany style content planning can be highlighted as a “content engine.”

15. What should I put on my homepage to convert more visitors

Many homepages are just pretty. A converting homepage has a clear headline, a simple offer, proof, key services, process, case studies, and one strong CTA. If you teach this, you instantly become a trusted guide.

16. Do I need a landing page, or can I run ads to my homepage

If you run ads to a homepage, visitors often get lost. A landing page is focused, with one goal. Explain this clearly and people will understand why a landing page increases conversion. This also reduces objections when you recommend website improvements.

17. How much does marketing cost, and what affects pricing

People are thinking about money even if they do not ask. You do not need to put exact pricing if you do not want to, but you should explain what affects it. For example, ad spend, number of platforms, creative volume, reporting, and complexity. This makes pricing feel fair, not random.

18. What is included in ongoing support, and how communication works

Clients want to know how often they will hear from you. Add details like weekly updates, monthly review calls, WhatsApp support hours, and turnaround times. Clarity reduces anxiety and improves retention.

19. Can you show proof, case studies, or real examples

Proof removes doubt. Add before after examples, screenshots, brand stories, and mini case studies. Even if you cannot share full numbers, show outcomes like growth, consistency, lead volume, or process improvements.

20. What happens if results are slow in the beginning

This question builds trust because it shows maturity. Explain that early phases involve learning, testing, creative iteration, and data collection. Then optimisation improves performance. This makes clients patient and realistic.

21. What are the most common mistakes businesses make in 2026 marketing

Give a helpful list in paragraph form. Common mistakes include copying competitors, chasing trends without strategy, not tracking leads, not improving the website, weak follow up, and inconsistent content. When you call these out, you position yourself as a real partner.

22. How do you handle brand voice and creative direction

Brands worry that agencies will post generic content. Explain how you capture tone, visuals, messaging pillars, and do approvals. Mention moodboards, references, and content guidelines. This is a strong trust signal for creative services.

23. Do you work with small businesses, and will it still work for me

Many people feel they are “too small.” Your website should reassure them with a clear approach, focus on fundamentals, offer clarity, consistent content, and simple lead gen. Explain that small brands win by being clear, not by being loud.

24. What should I prepare before booking a call

This improves call quality. Ask them to prepare their offer, target audience, past results, budget range, and what success looks like. It also makes you look structured and serious.

25. What is the next step, and how do I contact you

This is where many websites fail. Make the CTA simple. One strong primary action is best, like “Book a strategy call,” or “Get a free audit,” or “Request a plan.” Also tell them what happens after they submit the form, so they feel safe taking action.

How to use these 25 questions on your website

Do not put all 25 on one page in a messy way. Use them smartly.

Put 6 to 8 key answers on your homepage.
Put deeper answers on service pages and pricing pages.
Create a dedicated FAQ or Help page for high intent questions.
Turn a few questions into blog posts, because each good answer can become a traffic page.

This is exactly how strong websites become “decision-friendly” in 2026.

Final note from Kodo Kompany

Your website should not be a brochure. It should be your best salesperson. When your site answers the right questions, people trust you faster. They enquire faster. And they buy with less hesitation.

If you want, Kodo Kompany can help you turn your current website into a simple, high trust, high conversion system using content, SEO, landing pages, and lead gen workflows.

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