Yes, you can hire someone just to fix your WordPress enquiry flow, and in a lot of cases that is the smarter move than paying for a full rebuild. If people are landing on your site but not getting in touch, the problem is often not the whole website. It is the path between interest and action. That is exactly the sort of thing I fix. A lot of small business sites do an alright job of existing, but a poor job of converting. The pages are there. The services are there. The contact form technically works. But the site still makes it too hard for someone to take the next step. That usually shows up in a few ways. Your call to action is weak or buried. Your contact button is only in one place. Your form asks for too much. Your phone number is not clickable on mobile. Your booking link opens the wrong calendar. Your quote form sends people into a dead end. Or your website gives visitors too many choices and not enough direction. That is what I mean by enquiry flow. It is the chain from someone arriving on the page to them actually contacting you, booking, calling, or requesting a quote. When that chain is broken, the business consequence is simple. You waste the traffic you already have. That means money spent on SEO, referrals, Google Business Profile, social posts, or ads is not working as hard as it should. You are paying to get attention, then losing the lead at the point where they were ready to act. For a small business, that is one of the most annoying ways to leak work because it is invisible unless someone looks properly. This is also why I do not always recommend a rebuild first. A rebuild sounds cleaner. It feels like a bigger fix. But if the real issue is that your service pages do not point clearly to the right action, or your form puts people off, or your booking setup is clunky on mobile, rebuilding the whole thing is often overkill. Sometimes the better job is much more practical. It might be: rewriting the calls to action so each page tells people what to do next reducing a long contact form to the fields that actually matter splitting one generic contact option into separate paths, for example quote request, callback, or booking making mobile contact buttons obvious and easy to use fixing form delivery so enquiries actually reach the right inbox cleaning up a booking process so people do not drop off halfway through adding the right trust signals near the action point, not hidden elsewhere on the site tightening the page copy so it matches what the visitor came for None of that is flashy. It is just the sort of website work that gets more value out of what you already have. WordPress sites are especially common here because loads of businesses have one that was built a while ago, patched a few times, and left to drift. The site still sort of works, but the contact journey has become messy. A plugin changed something. A page builder block looks odd on mobile. A form goes to spam. A booking tool was bolted on later and never properly checked. These are normal problems, but they still cost you enquiries. This is where having a web guy helps. You do not need to hire an agency to produce a 40page strategy document. You usually need someone to look at the site like a customer would, spot the friction, fix the technical bits, tighten the wording, and make sure the path to contact is clear. That can be a oneoff fix, or it can roll into ongoing support if the site needs regular attention. The reason ongoing support matters is that enquiry flow is not one single button. It sits across forms, mobile layout, page copy, plugin behaviour, speed, email delivery, and basic user experience. If one part slips, lead conversion drops with it. That is why some businesses feel like their website has gone a bit quiet without knowing exactly why. If you are wondering whether this applies to your site, ask a few blunt questions. Is it obvious what someone should do on every main service page? Can a visitor contact you in under a minute from their phone? Does the form only ask for what you genuinely need? Have you tested where enquiries actually land? Does your booking or quote process feel simple, or does it feel like admin? Are you giving people one clear next step, or making them work it out themselves? If the answer to a couple of those is no, there is a good chance the issue is not traffic alone. It is the handover from interest to enquiry. That is fixable. And importantly, it is the kind of job you can hire someone for without starting from scratch. A good WordPress fix is not always a redesign. Sometimes it is a sharper contact path, cleaner page structure, fewer points of friction, and a website that finally does its job properly. If your WordPress site is getting visitors but not enough decent enquiries, I can help you work out where the dropoff is and fix it. Have a look at leeday.uk if you want a web guy to sort the practical stuff.