6 Ways To Turn More Of Your Website Visitors Into Pet Sitting Clients
All too often, a pet sitter will build a website then sit back and hope for the best. Without taking an active role in your visitor activity, you may be missing out on new pet sitting clients.
First, define what the goal of your website is. In order to create a successful website, you’ll need to dig deeper than “To get more clients.”
You need to ask yourself this question: “What exactly do I want each visitor to do before leaving my pet sitting website?”

I hear plenty of chatter about keyword this and keyword that when it comes to building the perfect pet sitting website. Sure, you need to be keyword-conscious but the trick is knowing which keywords you should be targeting in the first place.
Obtaining a competitive edge or advantage is one way to ensure success as a pet sitter. Referrals from happy clients can be one of your strongest tools to winning more clients.
It sounds like the perfect plan. You become a qualified pet sitter in your area, get business cards printed up and are ready to get some referrals from your local vet, groomer or pet store.
First impressions really are everything. If you do not immediately grab the attention (and trust) of a potential client in a positive way, it’ll be unlikely she’ll ever become a client of yours.
Your website’s title tag is by far one of the most important elements when it comes to search engine optimization (SEO).
The more a potential client sees you running your pet sitting business like a business, the greater chance you have at gaining that new client. If your clients see you running your business like a hobby or a side job, the less comfortable and willing they’ll be to hire you.
While some may argue the most important way to promote your pet sitting business is with fliers trying to partner with groomers, pet stores and vet offices, it is no doubt even more important to promote your pet sitting business online with your own website.
Using just any old website building tool for your pet sitting business may prove costly if the html code it uses to turn your design into a website is not search engine-friendly.