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What a Bad Website Actually Costs You (Real Numbers)

A bad website doesn’t just look unprofessional — it actively costs you money. Here’s how to calculate what your current site is costing in lost business.

Aline Niyonsaba · Business and lifestyle, KigaliPublished Updated 6 min read

A lodge near Nyungwe told me they get about 400 website visitors per month. Their booking inquiry form? Hidden on a subpage, below the fold, next to a wall of text. Their conversion rate was 0.5% — roughly 2 inquiries per month from 400 visitors.

After redesigning with a clear “Check Availability” button on the homepage, conversion jumped to 3.5%. Same traffic. Same lodge. 14 inquiries per month instead of 2. The old website wasn’t free — it was costing them 12 potential bookings every month.

The bounce rate tax

If your website takes more than 3 seconds to load on mobile, 53% of visitors leave before seeing anything. That’s not a design preference — that’s Google’s own data.

53%
of mobile visitors
leave if a page takes over 3 seconds to load

Let’s do rough maths for a Kigali business:

  • You get 300 visitors/month
  • Your site loads in 5 seconds on mobile (slow)
  • ~160 leave before seeing your content (53%)
  • Of the 140 who stay, maybe 3% contact you = 4 leads
  • If your site loaded fast, 300 visitors × 3% = 9 leads
  • You’re losing 5 potential customers per month to slow loading alone

The credibility cost

A Stanford study found that 75% of users judge a company’s credibility based on its website design. Not the product. Not the service. The website.

If your website looks like it was built in 2012, visitors assume your business is equally outdated. They don’t call to verify. They just leave and find a competitor with a modern site.

The SEO cost

A bad website doesn’t just lose the visitors it gets — it fails to attract visitors in the first place. Poor mobile experience, slow loading, thin content, and missing metadata mean Google ranks you lower. Lower rankings mean fewer visitors. Fewer visitors mean fewer customers.

Meanwhile, your competitor with a properly built site is ranking above you, capturing the traffic you should be getting.

How to calculate your cost

Simple formula:

  1. Check your Google Analytics for monthly visitors (or estimate based on your industry)
  2. Estimate your conversion rate (industry average is 2–5%)
  3. Multiply by your average order/contract value
  4. That’s your potential monthly revenue from web traffic
  5. Now estimate how much you’re losing to slow speed, bad design, and missing calls-to-action

A professional website from a provider like Kisimenti costs RWF 30,000–80,000/month. If it captures even one additional client per month, the ROI is immediate and obvious.

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What a Bad Website Actually Costs You (Real Numbers) · Kisimenti Times