Does My Website Need a Rebrand?

There’s no fixed point at which a website needs a rebrand. But you might start to notice some signs when it gives off “dated” vibes, the enquiries have dropped off, or you’re not generating the right kind of leads.  

So, you swap out a few images, tweak the layout, sort technical glitches, and assume that’s that. But nothing much changes. That’s when it’s more likely to be a branding disconnect. 

For a lot of businesses, the work moves on, but the branding stays where it is. And that widening gap is so gradual it can be easy to miss – until one day, you realise your website is showing customers a version of you that no longer really exists. 

UX vs Branding 

When a website underperforms, it usually comes down to one of two things: how the site works, or what the site is saying. Different problems, different fixes. Confuse them, and you end up changing the wrong thing. 

Signs it’s a website UX problem 
If the issue is structural, you’ll tend to see things like: 

  • pages that are hard to navigate with no clear path from one step to the next, so people don’t know where to go next 
  • important information buried or split across pages, making it harder to piece together 
  • calls to action that are weak, inconsistent or missing altogether, so people don’t take the next step 
  • the layout doesn’t really guide people through the page, so they have to work things out for themselves 
  • different pages feel disconnected or repeat the same information, making the site feel unfocused 
  • a site that feels slow or awkward on mobile, where most people are actually viewing it 

Signs it’s a website branding problem 

This is about what the site is communicating. It tends to show up like this: 

  • the work you’re getting doesn’t match what you actually want to be doing, even if enquiries are coming in  
  • people get through the site but still aren’t clear who you are or where you fit, so they don’t know if it’s for them  
  • the site doesn’t build enough trust for the level you’re aiming for, so people hesitate or drop off  
  • your pricing feels harder to justify than it should, even when the work itself is solid  
  • there’s nothing on the site that clearly sets you apart from others doing similar work, so you get compared on price alone 
  • the tone feels off for the clients you’re trying to attract  

What a website rebrand involves 

What a website rebrand involves depends on how far the content has drifted from the business behind it.  

It usually starts with a full audit of what the site is currently saying, who it’s attracting, and how well it reflects where you are now. From there, you can work out what needs to change, what can stay, and how to rework the structure so each page has a clear role, and the copy does its job. 

The part people often underestimate is that a website rebrand doesn’t work in isolation. If your site moves forward but your social media, print, and other channels stay stuck in the old version of your brand, the whole thing feels inconsistent across different touchpoints.  

That’s why the process usually includes developing a brand pack alongside the website work, so everything stays cohesive whether someone finds you through a Google search, an Instagram post, or a printed brochure.

DIY vs professional rebranding 

DIY website rebrands 

DIY works when the site is broadly right and just needs tightening, you already know how it should read and who it’s for, and you’ve got the time to step back and work through it properly. It’s also the more budget-friendly route. 

The main risks here are capability and perspective.  

Not every business has the in-house know-how to do a thorough job of rebranding their website. Also, when you’re too close to something, you tend to keep things that should go, soften the message to keep options open, and keep tweaking instead of actually fixing it. So, you just end up with a slightly different version that still has issues. 

Professional website rebrands 

Bringing branding gurus in makes sense when you need more expertise than your team can realistically deliver, or when:

  • you’re not sure what the site should say 
  • you don’t know how far the changes need to go 
  • you’ve already made changes but nothing’s really shifted 
  • you want it sorted properly, not chipped away at 

It’s a route that’s more likely to give you a clear direction and a site that’s been reworked in all the right places. 

Yes, this route means more investment upfront, and it takes some back-and-forth to get right. But doing it yourself can drag on, pull you away from actual work, and still miss the mark. That’s where the real cost sits. The difference isn’t just a nicer-looking site, it’s whether it actually does the job and pays for itself in the long term. 

Struggling to keep customers on your website? 

If you’re still not sure whether your site has a UX issue, a branding problem, a combination of the two (or something else entirely), talk to us.  

Our team are seasoned specialists at finding all the weak spots and delivering the perfect solution for your business – whatever size you are or stage you’re at. 

If you’d rather get a feel for how we work first, why not take a look at our branding page and portfolio, or brand pack services