You're getting traffic. You're not getting inquiries. Here's what that actually tells you.
A specific, useful signal — not a reason to write off your traffic as low quality by default.
The easy, usually wrong explanation
"Our traffic must just be low quality" is the explanation businesses reach for first, because it doesn't require looking at the website itself. It's sometimes true — but far more often, traffic with real intent is arriving and leaving because of something specific and fixable on the site, not because the visitors themselves were never going to be a fit.
How to actually tell the difference
Check where visitors are coming from. If a meaningful share arrives through relevant search terms, direct visits, or referrals — not random, unrelated traffic — the intent is probably real, and the gap is what happens after they land. If your analytics show high bounce specifically on your highest-intent pages, that's a strong signal it's the site, not the traffic.
What "traffic but no inquiries" usually points to
See Why Websites Don't Generate Leads for the specific structural reasons — unclear next step, generic positioning, a buried or high-friction contact path. This is almost always a smaller, more specific list than "everything is wrong," which is good news: it's usually fixable without starting over.
When it genuinely is a traffic problem
If visitors are arriving through clearly irrelevant search terms, low-intent ad targeting, or bot-heavy sources, no amount of website structure fixes that — the fix is on the traffic-generation side, which is outside what a website redesign can solve.
Questions
How do I check where my traffic is actually coming from?+
Basic analytics — if you don't have it set up yet, that's itself part of the problem; see What Makes a Website Generate Leads for why it matters.
Could my traffic just be bots or irrelevant clicks?+
It's possible — checking traffic sources and behaviour patterns (bounce rate, time on page) usually makes this clear fairly quickly.
What's the fastest way to find my specific gap?+
A Revenue Audit reviews your actual site and traffic pattern and tells you plainly whether it's structural, traffic-related, or both.
Does more traffic help if the website itself is the problem?+
No — it usually just means losing more visitors the same way, faster. Fix the structural gap before investing further in traffic.