So you want a website, but the idea of a 5-page, SEO-optimized, tech-heavy site makes you want to take a nap?

Welcome to the world of one-page websites — simple, intentional, and actually doable.

If you’ve been putting off your site because it feels like too much or because you don’t know what to say (or how to say it without sounding robotic), I’ve got you.

You don’t need 10 pages, a custom-coded theme, or perfect copy to get started.

But you do need clarity, structure, and a layout that leads your visitor from “hmm interesting…” to “yep, I’m in.”

Let’s walk through what to include.

Section 1: A clear, kind headline that tells them they’re in the right place

Think less “Welcome to my site!” and more:

“Supportive business systems & behind-the-scenes help for neurodivergent creatives.”

Let the first thing they read do the heavy lifting.

You don’t need clever wordplay. You need clarity that says:

  • Who you help

  • What you help with

  • How it benefits them

And bonus points if it makes them feel seen.

Section 2: A short intro that builds trust

This is where you show them why you get it — and that you’re a real human, not a corporate machine.

A few short lines about your story or values can go a long way here.

Something like:

“As a neurodivergent business owner, I know what it’s like to have a million ideas and no time or systems to support them. That’s why I offer customized support for the creatives, dreamers, and spoonies who need more ease, not more hustle.”

✨ Tip: A photo of you here helps — but it doesn’t have to be stiff or corporate. Cozy, calm, or even a candid of you working in your element works beautifully.

Section 3: What you offer (in plain language)

Use short, friendly headings and a sentence or two to explain each offer.

💡 If your services are still evolving or flexible, it’s okay to group them.
Ex:

  • Admin + systems support for solo biz owners

  • Neurodivergent-friendly home & life management

  • Social media content & analytics for creatives

You’re not locking yourself into these forever — you’re giving people something concrete to respond to now.

Section 4: Who it’s for — and who it’s not

This is an often-skipped piece, but it’s incredibly grounding for both you and your potential client.

Tell them:

  • Who you love working with

  • Who this support is especially for

  • What you don’t offer (optional, but helpful)

It filters out the wrong fits without you needing to do extra explaining later.

Section 5: How to work with you (aka the CTA)

Here’s where you say what they should do next — clearly and confidently.

Options could include:

  • “Book a free 20-min intro call”

  • “Fill out the inquiry form”

  • “Send me a DM on Instagram with the word SUPPORT”

Make it one specific action, not a bunch of scattered links.

✨ Pro tip: Reassure them here too. A kind sentence like “No pressure, just a space to see if we’re a fit” goes a long way for anxious brains.

Optional: A testimonial, FAQ, or quick contact form

You don’t need these to launch, but if you have space or time:

  • A short client quote can build trust

  • A mini FAQ (2–3 Qs) can ease anxiety

  • A contact form right on the page reduces clicks

But again: not mandatory. One page = one clear journey.

A one-page website needs just 5 things to convert

  1. • A clear headline that makes them feel seen
  2. • A short intro that builds trust
  3. • Simple service descriptions
  4. • A section that says who it’s for
  5. • A clear next step (CTA)

You can absolutely keep it flexible, friendly, and you.
I’ve designed my own and clients’ one-pagers around these exact pieces — and they work.

If you want me to build one for you, or just help you finally get your first draft done, that’s literally what I do.