When a client says, “We rebuilt our website and lost all our SEO,” or “I haven’t had a phone call since the new site went live,” there’s almost always the same pattern: the site got smaller — and someone removed the pages that actually drove traffic and trust. Shrinking a site can be smart. It can also kill your organic visibility and make your business look smaller than it is.
This post explains when website size matters, when it doesn’t, and how to make smart decisions so your site supports the goals that matter most: leads, credibility, and growth.
Redesigns are usually driven by two emotions: speed and aesthetic. A single-page site looks clean, loads fast, and converts when you already have traffic from ads, referrals, or repeat customers. But businesses that rely on organic search, local discovery, or buyer research often lose ground when they cut content aggressively.
Typical complaints we hear:
If you remove pages that matched specific search intent — service pages, location pages, product pages, case studies — you remove the reasons search engines and people had to visit you in the first place.
Cutting content to “simplify” makes three core trade-offs:
Example: a plumber shrinks a 30-page site to a single landing page. They may still show for generic searches like “plumber near me,” but they’ll likely drop for “water heater replacement,” “commercial plumbing,” or “emergency leak repair.” Those queries are usually matched to pages that specialize in that exact service — the detailed how, pricing hints, and proof that you’ve done it before.
There’s also a credibility problem. B2B buyers, procurement officers, and commercial clients expect to evaluate depth: case studies, certifications, project galleries, and team bios. A three-page site versus a hundred-page competitor creates an immediate impression. That impression influences the conversion decision long before a human speaks to you.
Small site is fine when:
Size matters when you want:
Practical rule of thumb: businesses that plan on meaningful SEO results usually land at 20–30 pages minimum — that includes service pages, location pages, team bios, resources, and blog posts. Under 10–12 pages makes it very hard to cover many search intents unless your keyword set is tiny and tightly focused.
Search ranking is about matching intent. If you want to rank for a keyword (or a set of closely related queries), create a page that’s focused on that topic.
Each page is a new opportunity to win a search.
You don’t need 600 pages on day one. Build intentionally and iteratively.
Keep the essential pages and optimize them (meta titles, H1s, schema).
Launch with clear conversion points (contact, book, quote).
Map keyword opportunities and plan pages to add monthly.
Audit for missing service and location pages.
Start a content schedule: 1–2 blog posts or case studies per month.
Create topic clusters: a pillar page with supporting posts.
Audit for thin or duplicate content after a redesign.
Consolidate or redirect poorly performing or redundant pages — don’t delete blindly.
Continue expanding with case studies and targeted long-tail content.
SEO losses after a redesign usually come from deleting pages without migration strategy.
Pro tip: keep the visual navigation fresh but preserve or map the underlying URLs. That minimizes lost organic signals.
If your acquisition is paid-first (ads, social, LSAs), small campaign landing pages can work well. Their job is to convert those visitors.
But even in paid models:
The question isn’t just “Does size matter?” — it’s “What do you want your website to do?” If your goal is fast conversions from paid traffic, a small landing can be perfect. If you want long-term organic growth, local visibility, or to win B2B evaluations, your site needs depth and topical coverage.
You don’t need hundreds of pages on day one. You do need a strategy: start with the right core pages, protect the URLs that carry value during a redesign, and add content intentionally. Most businesses that see sustainable SEO results end up with 20–30 pages or more — but they reached that number by iterating, not by trying to do it all at once.
Treat your website like your best salesperson: give it the pages it needs to answer every question a prospect might ask.
Ready to turn SEO challenges into opportunities? At Muletown Digital, we know that every missed keyword and technical glitch can hold back your growth. Let our expert team help you fine-tune your strategy—from targeted keyword research to flawless site performance and engaging content that converts. Invest in your online future today and contact us to unlock your website’s full potential.
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