Updated 2026-06-21. Written and maintained by Dan Nunez.
Common small-site mistakes
The purpose of this guide is narrow on purpose: explain common small-site mistakes in plain language, then point the reader toward one careful improvement they can make.
Making the homepage too vague
The purpose of this guide is narrow on purpose: explain common small-site mistakes in plain language, then point the reader toward one careful improvement they can make.
Skipping contact information
For common small-site mistakes, the strongest improvement is usually a specific public check. Look at what visitors can actually see and fix the part that creates doubt.
Publishing thin pages
Common small-site mistakes should stand on its own. A visitor should be able to read this guide, see the specific issue being discussed, and know what detail to check next.
Trusting local tests too much
The reader should leave this guide with a clearer sense of common small-site mistakes. If the page does not make the next check easier, it needs more specific detail.
Letting repeated wording pile up
This guide should avoid filler. It needs to connect common small-site mistakes to a concrete site-maintenance decision, such as checking a page, confirming a form, or clarifying a policy.
Forgetting mobile visitors
This guide belongs on KiloParse only if it helps someone make a better website decision. The explanation should be direct, specific, and different from the surrounding pages.
Fix the trust issues first
When reviewing common small-site mistakes, the useful question is not whether the page sounds impressive. The useful question is whether a stranger can understand the issue and act on it.
Common small-site mistakes should stand on its own. A visitor should be able to read this guide, see the specific issue being discussed, and know what detail to check next.
Keep the repair list small
For this guide, the example angle is Common small-site mistakes. The page should help someone understand how the idea shows up during a real review, using the actual public version of the site rather than a private draft.
Make the site feel cared for
This page treats common small-site mistakes as a real maintenance task. The point is to reduce confusion, not to promise rankings, revenue, approval, or traffic.