You run a busy salon. Or a café. Or a small law practice. You know you need a website — customers literally tell you "I couldn't find you online" — but every time you sit down to figure it out, it feels like you'd need a part-time computer science degree to make sense of it.
You're not wrong that the old way was hard. Hiring a developer: $3,000–$8,000 and six weeks of back-and-forth. Building it yourself in Wix: two weekends of dragging boxes around, and it still looks like a template everyone's seen before. DIY WordPress: a support ticket waiting to happen.
Here's what changed in 2026: AI website builders have gotten genuinely good for non-technical small business owners. Not "good for a robot" — actually good. You describe what you want in plain English, and you get a professional website. Your salon's booking form, your café's digital menu, your clinic's appointment page — all of it, without touching code, without a developer, and often in an afternoon.
This guide is the one I wish existed when I was helping non-technical business owners get online. It covers everything: picking the right tool, writing copy that doesn't put customers to sleep, adding booking and payments the easy way, staying legally compliant, going live with a real domain, and then actually getting found after launch.
No jargon. No code. Just the steps.
Key Takeaways
- AI website builders now generate professional small business websites from plain English descriptions — no code required
- The fastest path: pick an industry-matched template or prompt, add your real content, and go live in one afternoon
- Booking, payments, and digital menus plug in as features — you don't build them from scratch
- Compliance (GDPR, LGPD, Impressum) has a checklist you can tick off in 30 minutes, not months
- Getting found on Google after launch requires 4 specific steps — most guides skip them
- Every industry has different must-haves: a salon site isn't a restaurant site isn't a lawyer's site
Table of Contents
- Why Most Small-Biz Website Advice Is Wrong for You
- What You Actually Need (And What You Don't)
- Pick the Template That Fits Your Industry
- Writing Copy That Converts in 30 Minutes
- Online Booking, Menus, and Payments — The Easy Way
- Compliance You Can't Skip (GDPR / Impressum / LGPD)
- Going Live: Domain, SSL, Google Maps, Social
- After Launch: Reviews, SEO, and Growing
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Most Small-Biz Website Advice Is Wrong for You
Most website advice is written by developers for developers, or by marketers who think you have a dedicated web team. Neither describes your life.

You are the owner, the manager, the accountant, and the person who mops the floor on Saturday nights. You have maybe one afternoon per week you could call "spare time," and none of it should be spent debugging a WordPress plugin conflict.
The advice you usually find falls into one of three traps:
Trap 1: "Just use Wix/Squarespace" (without telling you which plan, which template, or how to adapt it to your business) Generic builder advice assumes you can figure out the rest. But choosing the wrong template in Squarespace costs you three hours of rework. Picking the wrong Wix plan locks you out of booking features.
Trap 2: "Hire a developer" (without mentioning that it costs $3,000–$8,000 and takes 6 weeks) Good developers are worth it for complex applications. For a business website? You're paying mostly for setup and template customization you could do yourself today.
Trap 3: "Learn basic HTML/CSS first" (completely unnecessary in 2026) This is like telling someone to learn to maintain a car engine before they're allowed to drive. The tool has changed. The skill required is now describing what you want clearly — which you already do every day when you brief an employee, describe a dish to a supplier, or explain a case to a client.
The 2026 reality: AI website builders like Fardino generate professional websites from plain English. You don't drag boxes. You don't pick from 800 confusing templates. You describe your business, your services, and your vibe — and you get a real website.
The gap between "I need a website" and "I have a website" is now measured in hours, not months.
What You Actually Need (And What You Don't)
Before you build anything, let's be honest about what a small business website actually needs to do.
It needs to do three things:
- Tell people what you do and where you are
- Make it easy for them to contact you, book an appointment, or buy something
- Look professional enough that they trust you
That's it. Not 47 pages. Not a blog with weekly posts. Not a live chat widget that's connected to your personal phone at 2am.
Here's a table that cuts through the noise:
| What You Think You Need | What You Actually Need | Why the Difference |
|---|---|---|
| A huge website with 10+ pages | 1–4 pages maximum | Most visitors see 1–2 pages before deciding |
| A blog for SEO | Google Business Profile first | GBP drives 3× more local traffic than a blog for most service businesses |
| A custom logo before launch | Any clean wordmark | Customers care about the offer, not the logo |
| Stock photo portfolio | A few real photos of your space/work | Real photos outperform stock every time |
| Multiple CTAs everywhere | One clear action per page | Too many choices = no choice |
| Live chat widget | A simple contact form + WhatsApp link | Simpler, lower maintenance, same conversion |
| Perfect website before launch | A good-enough website that exists | An imperfect live site beats a perfect draft |
The biggest mistake small business owners make is scope creep before launch. You start wanting a simple booking page, and three weeks later you're debating your "brand color palette" while your competitor just went live with something imperfect that's already catching customers.
The minimum viable business website:
One page can contain all of this. Two pages works great. Three pages is more than enough for most local service businesses.
That said, what specifically goes on those pages depends heavily on your industry. A yoga studio needs a class schedule. A photographer needs a gallery. A lawyer needs a credentials section. Let's get specific.
Pick the Template That Fits Your Industry
Here's the most useful section in this guide: industry-specific starting points. Use these to brief your AI builder — either copy the structure or use it as the basis for your opening prompt.

Hair Salons & Barbershops
Your visitors want to know: what services do you offer, what do they cost, can I book online right now?
Must-have sections:
- Hero with a before/after photo or team photo + instant booking CTA
- Services & pricing menu (people always want prices — hiding them loses customers)
- Team showcase with stylist photos and specialties
- Gallery of recent work (Instagram-style grid)
- Booking form or online booking widget
- Location + hours
The thing that separates a salon site that books appointments from one that doesn't: showing prices. Customers who have to call to find out pricing almost never call.
Our full hair salon website tutorial walks through building this step by step, including the exact prompts that generate the best layout for booking-heavy sites.
Try this prompt⌘+Enterto launch
Restaurants & Cafés
Your visitors want to know: what's on the menu, what does it cost, can I reserve a table, where are you?
Must-have sections:
- Hero with your best food photo + reservation CTA
- Digital menu (organized by category with prices — not a PDF)
- Opening hours + location (with Google Maps embed)
- Reservation form or booking link
- Gallery of food and atmosphere
- "Our story" short paragraph (people want to feel connected)
The single biggest upgrade any restaurant site can make in 2026: replace the PDF menu with a digital menu. PDFs don't work on phones. A well-structured digital menu with photos of dishes can increase order values noticeably.
See our restaurant website guide for the full setup, and our dedicated guide on adding a digital menu with QR codes for that specific feature.
Try this prompt⌘+Enterto launch
Personal Trainers & Yoga Studios
Your visitors want to know: what classes or sessions do you offer, what's your approach, how do I sign up?
Must-have sections:
- Hero with an action photo and a "Book a Free Intro Session" CTA
- Class schedule or session types
- Trainer bio(s) — credentials matter here, show your certifications
- Testimonials from real clients
- Pricing / membership options
- Online booking or contact form
Fitness businesses live and die by their schedule. Make it easy to see what's happening this week — a static list is fine, a live calendar embed is better.
Our personal trainer and yoga studio website guide includes specific prompts for building class schedule components that look great on mobile.
Photographers & Creatives
Your visitors want to see your work first. Everything else is secondary.
Must-have sections:
- Full-width gallery as the hero — your best images, immediately visible
- Filterable portfolio (by type: wedding, portrait, commercial, etc.)
- About section that shows your personality (you're selling yourself, not just photos)
- Packages & pricing
- Booking form with date picker
- Contact / inquiry form
One thing photographers often get wrong: burying the gallery. Clients want to see your work before they read a single word. Put the images first.
See the photographer portfolio website guide for gallery-first layouts and the specific prompts that generate beautiful masonry and lightbox components.
Lawyers, Accountants & Consultants
Your visitors want to know: are you credible, do you handle my type of problem, how do I get in touch?
Must-have sections:
- Professional hero with your photo (people hire people, not firms)
- Practice areas or services (clear, plain-language descriptions)
- Credentials, bar admissions, certifications
- Case results or testimonials (where legally permitted)
- Blog or FAQ (builds authority and answers common questions)
- Simple contact form with a clear consultation CTA
Solo professionals often underinvest in their "About" page. For a lawyer or accountant, your background is your product. Don't hide it in three bullet points.
Our solo lawyer and accountant website guide covers the specific trust signals that convert visitors into consultation bookings.
Online Course Creators & Coaches
Your visitors want to know: what's the transformation, who is this for, what's included, what does it cost?
Must-have sections:
- Hero with a clear outcome promise ("Go from X to Y in Z weeks")
- Who this is for (and who it's NOT for — specificity builds trust)
- Course curriculum or coaching structure
- About the instructor — credibility matters enormously here
- Student results / testimonials with specifics
- Pricing with what's included
- FAQ section (answers purchase objections before they arise)
The mistake most course creators make: leading with features ("10 modules! 45 videos!") instead of outcomes ("You'll have your first client within 30 days"). Lead with what their life looks like after.
See the online course creator website guide for sales page templates optimized for conversion.
Clinics & Dentists
Your visitors want to know: do you accept my insurance, are you taking new patients, how do I book an appointment?
Must-have sections:
- Hero with a reassuring photo of your space and a "Book Appointment" CTA
- Services / specialties in plain language (not medical jargon)
- Team section with doctor/staff photos and credentials
- Insurance accepted
- Appointment booking form or link
- Office hours and location
- Patient testimonials
Clinics have a higher trust bar to clear than most businesses. Professional photos of your actual space and team — not stock photos — make an enormous difference here.
Our small clinic and dentist website guide addresses the trust-building elements specific to healthcare, including GDPR/HIPAA considerations for contact forms.
Real Estate Agents
Your visitors want to browse properties, assess your expertise, and contact you easily.
Must-have sections:
- Hero that speaks to buyers or sellers (decide your focus)
- Featured listings with photos, price, and key details
- About section with local market knowledge (neighborhood-specific is gold)
- Testimonials from recent buyers/sellers
- Market stats or insights (optional, but shows expertise)
- Simple lead capture form ("Get a Free Home Valuation" beats "Contact Me")
The best real estate sites are hyper-local. If you're the go-to agent for the Westside, say it loud and early.
Our real estate agent website guide covers listings integration, lead capture forms, and neighborhood page templates.
Event & Wedding Planners
Your visitors want to see your portfolio, understand your style, and imagine you handling their day.
Must-have sections:
- Gallery-heavy hero with your best event photos
- Services / packages with clear descriptions
- Portfolio with categories (weddings, corporate, birthdays)
- About section — personality and planning style matter
- Testimonials from past clients
- Inquiry form (not a generic contact form — ask about their event date, type, and budget)
- FAQ (this industry has lots of questions)
Wedding clients in particular often visit 10–15 vendors before deciding. Your inquiry form response time is part of your product — consider a "We respond within 4 hours" note near the form.
See the event and wedding planner website guide for portfolio-forward layouts and high-converting inquiry forms.
Small E-commerce & Boutiques
Your visitors want to find what they're looking for, trust that checkout is safe, and buy.
Must-have sections:
- Product grid on the home page (your bestsellers, right up front)
- Clear product pages with multiple photos and a compelling description
- Shopping cart and checkout with payment options
- Shipping information and return policy (clearly visible — don't bury it)
- Trust signals: security badges, reviews, return guarantee
- About your brand (this is what separates you from Amazon)
Small e-commerce lives or dies by trust. Show reviews. Explain your return policy. Make shipping costs transparent before checkout. The cart abandonment you'll prevent is worth more than any marketing you'll run.
Our small e-commerce website guide covers product page optimization, payment integration (Stripe, Mercado Pago, and others), and trust signal placement.
Writing Copy That Converts in 30 Minutes
The website is built. Now it needs words. This is where most people stall for weeks.
Here's the truth: your customers don't care about your mission statement. They care about what you can do for them, why they should trust you, and what happens next.
Every page of your website needs to answer four questions:
- What is this? (What do you do, in one sentence)
- Is it for me? (Who specifically benefits from this)
- Why should I trust you? (Proof, credentials, social proof)
- What do I do next? (One clear call to action)
The 30-Minute Copy Formula:
Start here — write your answers to these prompts before you touch the website:
1. I help [specific type of customer] who [specific situation] by [specific solution]. Example: "I help busy professionals in downtown Chicago who want to look their best by offering same-day haircuts with zero wait." 2. My three biggest customer promises are: [Promise 1: speed, quality, price, expertise — pick what's real] [Promise 2] [Promise 3] 3. My social proof is: [X clients served] / [X years in business] / [X reviews] 4. The one thing I want visitors to do: [Book / Call / Order / Sign Up]
Once you've answered these, you have your homepage copy. Feed it to your AI builder as content to include — specific copy beats "add a catchy headline" every time.
Hero headline formula: "[Outcome] for [Customer type] in [Location/Context]"
| Industry | Bad Headline | Good Headline |
|---|---|---|
| Hair salon | "Welcome to Bella Studio" | "Look Amazing. Book in 60 Seconds." |
| Restaurant | "Fresh Food, Great Atmosphere" | "Dinner for Two, No Reservation Needed — Walk In Anytime" |
| Personal trainer | "Transform Your Body" | "First Session Free. Real Results in 30 Days." |
| Lawyer | "Experienced Legal Counsel" | "Fighting for Austin Families Since 2009" |
| Photographer | "Capturing Life's Moments" | "Your Wedding, Beautifully Documented. Galleries in 48 Hours." |
| E-commerce | "Quality Products at Fair Prices" | "Handmade Leather Goods. Shipped in 2 Days." |
One more rule: write in second person. "You'll" and "your" outperform "we" and "our" on almost every small business site. The page is about your customer, not about you.
Online Booking, Menus, and Payments — The Easy Way
The features that make small business websites actually earn money aren't difficult to add anymore. Let's break down the three that matter most.
Online Booking
The biggest upgrade most local service businesses can make: online booking. "Call us during business hours" loses you customers who are browsing at 10pm when your phone is off.
In 2026, you have two clean options:
| Option | Best For | Cost | Setup Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Embedded booking widget (Calendly, Cal.com, Acuity) | Any service business | Free–$15/month | 30 minutes |
| Built-in booking from your AI builder | New sites | Included | 15 minutes |
| Google Booking Button (Reserve with Google) | High-traffic local businesses | Free | 1–2 hours |
The simplest path for most small businesses: set up a free Calendly account, embed the widget into your booking page, and link it from your hero section's CTA button. Done.
If your AI builder has native booking built in, use that — one fewer account to manage.
For a complete setup guide including staff scheduling, reminders, and Google Calendar sync, see our online booking system guide for small businesses.
Digital Menus for Restaurants
A digital menu embedded in your website does three things a PDF menu cannot:
- Works perfectly on every phone without downloading
- Can be updated in minutes when prices or items change
- Can be linked from a QR code on each table
The basic version: a well-structured web page with your menu items, organized by category, with prices listed. No special software required. Your AI builder can generate this in one prompt:
Add a menu page to my restaurant site. Organize by category: Starters, Mains, Desserts, and Drinks. Each item has a name, brief description, and price. Show it in a clean two-column grid on desktop, single column on mobile.
The upgraded version: add a QR code on each table that links to this page. Your customers can order and pay without waiting for a server for the bill. See our full guide on digital menus and QR codes for restaurants for the complete setup.
Taking Payments
Here's the payment path that works for 90% of small businesses:
For online payments, Stripe is the global standard. For Latin American customers, add Mercado Pago. For Brazilian customers, offer Pix. For European customers, SEPA and iDEAL matter more than PayPal.
One practical setup for service businesses: only collect a deposit online (20–30% of the service cost). This reduces no-shows dramatically while keeping the payment process simple for new customers who might hesitate before a full payment.
Compliance You Can't Skip (GDPR / Impressum / LGPD)
This is the section everyone skips, and then panics about six months later. Let's handle it now.
The short version: if you collect any information from website visitors — even just email addresses — you need to tell them how you use it. Different regions have different requirements.
| Region | Regulation | What You Must Have |
|---|---|---|
| European Union / UK | GDPR | Privacy policy, cookie consent banner, data deletion request process |
| Germany, Austria, Switzerland | DSGVO + Impressum | All of GDPR, plus a legal Impressum page (required for all commercial websites) |
| Brazil | LGPD | Privacy policy, data subject rights notice, DPO contact (if applicable) |
| United States | State-by-state | California (CCPA), Virginia, Colorado, Texas — varies by state and business size |
| Canada | PIPEDA | Privacy policy, consent for data collection |
The minimum you need for most small business websites:
-
Privacy Policy page — explains what data you collect (contact form submissions, email addresses, analytics), why, and how long you keep it. Dozens of free generators exist (Termly, GetTerms, PrivacyPolicies.com).
-
Cookie consent banner — if you use Google Analytics or Facebook Pixel, you need one. Simple pop-up asking visitors to accept or decline cookies.
-
Contact form disclosure — a brief note under your contact form saying "Your information is used only to respond to your inquiry and is never shared or sold."
-
For German-speaking countries: Impressum — a mandatory legal notice page with your full name (or company name), address, phone number, and email. No exceptions for commercial websites.
The most important thing: don't let compliance concerns delay your launch. A basic privacy policy generated in 10 minutes is better than no website at all. You can refine it later.
For a complete compliance setup guide including free tools for each region, see our website compliance guide covering Impressum, GDPR, and LGPD.
Going Live: Domain, SSL, Google Maps, Social
You have a website. Now let's make it actually yours.
Step 1: Get a Domain Name
Your domain is your permanent address on the internet. A few rules:
- .com is still first choice for most businesses. If it's taken, try .co, .studio, .clinic, .law, etc.
- Keep it short — under 20 characters if possible
- Avoid hyphens — mybusiness.com beats my-business.com every time
- Match your business name — or at minimum include your core keyword ("austinhairsalon.com" works even without your business name)
Where to buy: Google Domains (now Squarespace Domains), Namecheap, or Cloudflare Registrar. Budget: $10–$15 per year for a .com.
Step 2: Verify SSL Is Active
SSL (the padlock icon in your browser address bar) is now standard — most website builders include it automatically. If your site shows a "Not Secure" warning, visitors will leave.
Check: go to your site. Does the URL start with https://? Yes? You're done. No? Contact your hosting provider — this is a 5-minute fix.
Step 3: Add Your Google Business Profile
This is the single highest-ROI action for any local business. It's free and it puts you on Google Maps, in the "local pack" search results, and gives you a place to collect reviews.
Go to google.com/business, create your profile, and fill in:
- Business name and category
- Address and service area
- Phone, website, hours
- 5–10 photos (interior, exterior, team, products)
Then link your website in the profile. This bidirectional connection helps both your Google Business profile and your website rank better.
Step 4: Connect Social Media
Add links to your active social profiles in your website footer. Don't list profiles you never update — a dead Instagram link hurts more than no link.
If you're active on one or two platforms, embed that feed. A live Instagram grid on your homepage keeps the content feeling current without you doing anything extra.
Going live checklist at a glance:
- Custom domain connected (not the builder's default URL)
- SSL active (HTTPS in address bar)
- Google Business Profile created and linked to website
- Contact information is accurate (phone, email, address)
- Opening hours visible on the page
- Mobile version tested on an actual phone
- One clear call-to-action above the fold
For the complete pre-launch checklist including performance checks and SEO basics, see our small business website launch checklist.
After Launch: Reviews, SEO, and Growing
Your website is live. Most small business owners stop here. The ones who grow past their competitors don't.
Here are the four moves that actually drive growth in the 6 months after launch.
Move 1: Build Your Google Review Base Immediately
Online reviews are the most powerful trust signal for local businesses. 93% of consumers read reviews before visiting a local business. A business with 50 reviews beats one with 5, almost regardless of average rating.
The fastest way to get reviews: ask every happy customer directly, in person, immediately after their appointment or purchase. Say exactly this: "If you had a good experience today, it would really help us if you left us a quick Google review. I can text you the direct link."
Then text them the link. Your direct Google review link is:
https://g.page/[your-business-id]/review — get it from your Google Business Profile dashboard.
Aim for 20 reviews in your first month. That alone will move you above most local competitors.
Move 2: Set Up Google Analytics (It Takes 15 Minutes)
You want to know:
- How many people are visiting your site
- Which page they land on
- Where they're coming from (Google, Instagram, direct)
- What percentage leave without doing anything (bounce rate)
This tells you whether your site is working. Without it, you're flying blind.
Setup: create a free Google Analytics account, add the tracking code to your website (your AI builder usually has a field for this), and connect it to your Google Business Profile.
Move 3: Pick Two Local SEO Actions
Full SEO is a long game. These two actions take less than an hour and have disproportionate impact for local businesses:
-
Add your city and neighborhood to your page titles and headings. "Hair Salon in Portland, OR" is far more specific to Google than just "Hair Salon."
-
Create a "Areas We Serve" section or page listing the specific neighborhoods, towns, or districts you work in. This doesn't need to be elaborate — even a paragraph works.
For comparison shopping and AI builder tool selection, see our detailed breakdown of Wix vs Squarespace vs AI builders for small business.
Move 4: Update Your Site When Things Change
Your website isn't a launch-and-forget asset. Every update signals to Google that your site is active. Practical things to update:
- Seasonal hours (holidays, summer schedules)
- New services or menu items
- Staff changes
- New photos
A site with genuinely current content consistently outperforms one that hasn't changed in 18 months.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to build a small business website in 2026?
It varies significantly by approach. A fully custom developer-built site: $3,000–$15,000. A traditional builder like Squarespace: $16–$49 per month, with e-commerce features adding more. AI-powered builders like Fardino: free to try, with paid plans starting around $10–$20 per month for a live site with custom domain. The domain itself runs $10–$15 per year. For most small businesses, an AI builder plus domain costs under $25 per month total.
How long does it take to build a professional small business website?
Using an AI builder: one afternoon for a simple service business site, or 4–8 hours for something more complex with booking, gallery, and multiple pages. A traditional builder requires 1–2 weekends of work. Hiring a developer means 4–6 weeks for a custom site. The biggest time investment is gathering your content — photos, service descriptions, pricing — not the actual building.
Do I need technical skills to use an AI website builder?
No. You describe what you want in plain English, and the builder generates the website. The skill you need is knowing what you want and describing it clearly — which is the same skill you use when briefing a new employee or explaining your business to a customer. If you can send a clear email, you can use a modern AI website builder.
Should I use Wix, Squarespace, or an AI builder?
It depends on your situation. Traditional builders (Wix, Squarespace) give you polished templates and a proven ecosystem — good choice if you want to manage everything yourself long-term and don't mind a longer initial setup. AI builders are faster to launch, require no design skills, and generate unique layouts rather than recognizable templates. They're the better choice for time-pressed business owners who want something professional without a design background. Our full comparison of Wix, Squarespace, and AI builders covers pricing, features, and which industries each suits best.
What should I put on my small business website homepage?
Focus on four things: (1) a clear statement of what you do and who you serve, (2) your main call to action (book, order, call, sign up), (3) social proof such as reviews, years in business, or client count, and (4) your contact information and hours. Everything else is secondary. Most effective small business homepages are actually quite simple — they answer "can you help me?" and make it easy to take the next step.
Do I need to be GDPR compliant if I'm a small business?
If you serve customers in the EU or UK — yes, even as a small business. GDPR applies regardless of business size. The good news: compliance is simpler than it sounds. A basic privacy policy (free to generate), a cookie consent banner (free plugins and tools exist), and honest data handling practices cover 95% of what a small business needs. If you're in Germany, Austria, or Switzerland, also add an Impressum page — it's legally required for all commercial websites. Our compliance guide covers exactly what to set up.
What's the difference between a website and a Google Business Profile? Do I need both?
Yes — both serve different purposes and work together. Your Google Business Profile is how you appear on Google Maps and in local search results. Your website is where you send people for full information, online booking, or purchasing. Google uses your website content to understand your business better, and your Business Profile links to your site, creating a reinforcing loop. Think of your Business Profile as your street presence and your website as your storefront — both matter.
Can I build my own small business website and still get professional results?
Absolutely. The output quality from modern AI builders is genuinely professional — not "pretty good for someone who isn't a designer," but actually good. The key variables are: the clarity of your brief (better description = better result), your real photos (stock photos underperform real ones), and your actual copy (specific, customer-focused text beats generic marketing language). Follow this guide's prompts and content advice, and you'll have a site you're proud to send customers to.
The Practical Next Step
You've read the full playbook. Here's what to do in the next 30 minutes:
- Write your content brief — business name, what you do, who you serve, three services, and your CTA. Just rough notes are enough.
- Grab three to five real photos — your space, your work, your team. Phone photos are fine.
- Use the industry prompt above that matches your business as your starting point.
- Launch before it's perfect — a real site, even imperfect, beats a draft every time.
The businesses that get online consistently outperform those still planning to. Customers who can't find you online are finding your competitor instead.
Start building your business website →
Related Guides: Build Yours in One Afternoon
By industry:
- Hair Salon Website: Step-by-Step Tutorial
- Restaurant & Café Website Tutorial
- Personal Trainer & Yoga Studio Website Tutorial
- Photographer Portfolio Website Tutorial
- Lawyer & Accountant Website Tutorial
- Online Course Creator & Coach Website Tutorial
- Clinic & Dentist Website Tutorial
- Real Estate Agent Website Tutorial
- Event & Wedding Planner Website Tutorial
- Small E-commerce & Boutique Website Tutorial
By feature:
- Add Online Booking to Any Small Business Website
- Set Up a Digital Menu with QR Code
- Website Compliance Guide: GDPR, Impressum & LGPD
Compare your options:
Before you launch:
Written by the 0xMinds Team. We write practical guides for small business owners who want a professional online presence without hiring a developer. Build your site with Fardino →





