Website Redesign Checklist for DFW Businesses: 27 Things to Audit Before You Rebuild
Most DFW businesses approach a website redesign backwards. They hire an agency, approve a design mockup, migrate their old content, and launch — then discover six months later that organic traffic dropped 40%, their best-converting pages disappeared, or the new site loads slower than the old one on mobile.
A website redesign done right starts with an audit of what you have before you decide what to build. This 27-point checklist covers everything DFW businesses need to assess before committing to a rebuild — and identifies the specific items that most commonly destroy SEO and conversion performance when handled incorrectly.
Section 1: SEO Preservation (Critical — Don't Skip)
Redesigns kill organic traffic. The leading cause is URL structure changes with missing or incorrect redirects. Complete this section before any design work begins.
1. Export Your Current URL Inventory
Use Screaming Frog (free for up to 500 URLs) or Google Search Console to export every indexed URL on your current site. This is your redirect map source. Do not redesign without it.
2. Identify Your Top-Traffic Pages
In Google Search Console → Performance → Pages, sort by clicks. Your top 20 pages account for the majority of your organic traffic. These pages must be preserved with identical or redirected URLs — even if the design changes completely.
3. Identify Your Top-Ranking Keywords
Export your current GSC keyword rankings. Pages ranking on page 1 for DFW local terms took months or years to achieve. Understand which pages are driving those rankings before restructuring your site architecture.
4. Document All Inbound Links
Use Google Search Console → Links → External Links to see which pages have backlinks pointing to them. These URLs must either be preserved or redirected — broken inbound links destroy link equity you've accumulated.
5. Map Every URL Change to a 301 Redirect
If any URL changes during the redesign, a 301 redirect must exist from the old URL to the new one. This includes: changed slugs, removed pages, restructured subdirectories. Missing redirects cause both lost rankings and broken user experience.
6. Preserve Meta Title and Description Structure
Your existing meta titles and descriptions may already be ranking. Export them with your URL inventory and treat them as starting points, not throwaway content to be rewritten from scratch.
7. Audit Structured Data
If your current site has LocalBusiness schema, FAQ schema, or review schema, document it. The redesign must include equivalent or improved structured data — not just visual design elements.
Section 2: Conversion Analysis
Before redesigning for aesthetics, understand what's actually driving leads on your current site. Changing things that are working is one of the most common redesign mistakes.
8. Identify Your Highest-Converting Pages
In Google Analytics 4, identify which pages have the highest conversion rates (contact form completions, call clicks, quote requests). These pages should be redesigned minimally — improve the design but preserve the conversion elements that are working.
9. Audit Your Current CTAs
Document every call-to-action on your current site: location, text, color, destination. The new design should test improved CTAs, not arbitrarily change them without understanding what baseline you're improving from.
10. Review Your Contact Form Completion Rate
Before redesigning your contact form, know your current completion rate. Average is 2-5% of visitors. If you're at 8%, your form is already high-performing — don't redesign it based on aesthetics alone.
11. Analyze Your Click-to-Call Rate on Mobile
For most DFW local businesses, mobile call clicks are the primary conversion action. Review your current mobile CTR to your phone number. The redesign should increase this number, not reset it to zero.
12. Identify Underperforming Pages Worth Cutting
Not every page on your current site should be rebuilt. Pages with zero traffic, zero conversions, and no backlinks are candidates for elimination. Fewer, better pages outperform large sites with diluted content in local SEO.
Section 3: Technical Requirements
13. Benchmark Current PageSpeed Scores
Run your current site through PageSpeed Insights on mobile. Record your score. The redesign contract should include a minimum performance target — we recommend 80+ on mobile for DFW businesses competing in organic search. If your new site scores lower than your old one, you have a problem.
14. Audit Current Hosting Setup
Understand who hosts your current site and what you're paying. The redesign is an opportunity to move to better infrastructure (Netlify, Vercel, WP Engine, or equivalent CDN-backed hosting) if you're currently on slow shared hosting. Hosting quality directly impacts Core Web Vitals.
15. Inventory Third-Party Integrations
List every third-party tool currently embedded in your site: Google Analytics, Google Tag Manager, Facebook Pixel, chat widgets, booking tools, CRM integrations, payment processors. Each needs to be verified and re-implemented in the new build.
16. Check SSL and Security Configuration
Confirm your new site will have SSL (HTTPS), HTTP-to-HTTPS redirects enforced, and appropriate security headers. Google uses HTTPS as a ranking signal. Non-HTTPS sites get browser security warnings that destroy conversion rate.
17. Define Mobile Requirements
Over 60% of DFW local business website traffic is mobile. Define specific mobile requirements in your redesign scope: clickable phone numbers, touch-friendly navigation, minimum tap target sizes, and no horizontal scroll on any screen size.
18. Establish Image Optimization Standards
Unoptimized images are the #1 cause of slow page loads in DFW business websites. Define in the redesign spec that all images will be served in WebP format, properly sized, and lazy-loaded below the fold.
Section 4: Content Decisions
19. Decide What Content to Preserve vs. Rewrite
Content that ranks should be preserved and improved, not discarded. Content that doesn't rank and doesn't convert is worth reconsidering. Make explicit decisions rather than defaulting to "migrate everything" or "start fresh."
20. Plan Your Local Content Architecture
Does your new site need location pages for Tarrant County, Collin County, or Dallas County? Service area pages for specific DFW submarkets? Plan your local content architecture before designing — URL structure decisions made in design phase are expensive to change later.
21. Audit and Update Your NAP (Name, Address, Phone)
Your business Name, Address, and Phone number must be consistent across your website, Google Business Profile, and all directory listings. A redesign is the right time to standardize NAP across all instances. Even minor variations ("St." vs. "Street") impact local rankings.
22. Plan Your Blog and Content Migration
If your current site has a blog, decide which posts to migrate (those with traffic and backlinks), which to consolidate (thin content on similar topics), and which to cut (zero traffic, zero links). Migrating all blog content indiscriminately moves your content quality problems to the new site.
Section 5: DFW-Specific Local SEO Requirements
23. Plan LocalBusiness Schema Implementation
Your new site must include properly formatted LocalBusiness JSON-LD schema on every page, including your business category (HomeAdvisor category code, if applicable), service area, operating hours, and geographic coordinates. This is non-negotiable for DFW local search visibility.
24. Define Your Service Area Pages
If you serve multiple DFW cities, plan dedicated landing pages for each market. A roofing company serving Fort Worth, Arlington, Grand Prairie, and Mansfield needs distinct pages for each location — not a single "Service Area" page listing them all.
25. Verify Google Business Profile Link Consistency
The website URL in your Google Business Profile must match your new site's URL exactly. Update GBP on launch day, not weeks later.
Section 6: Project Management and Launch Planning
26. Define Acceptance Criteria Before Work Begins
Write down what "done" looks like before signing a contract. Specific, measurable criteria: mobile PageSpeed score above 80, all redirects tested and functional, GA4 and GSC verified, contact form submitting to correct email, all structured data validating in Google's Rich Results Test. Vague "we'll know it when we see it" criteria leads to scope disputes and delayed launches.
27. Plan a Parallel Launch Period
If possible, keep your current site live until the new site has been tested end-to-end and all redirects verified. Launching simultaneously without testing removes your ability to roll back if something breaks. At minimum, have a rollback plan before going live.
How ThinkMents Handles DFW Website Redesigns
At ThinkMents, every DFW redesign project starts with a paid discovery and audit phase covering all 27 items on this checklist. We export your URL inventory, benchmark your current performance metrics, document your top-converting pages, and map every required redirect before a single design pixel is created.
This prevents the most common redesign failure modes: traffic drops, lost rankings, broken conversion flows, and missing integrations. We've rebuilt sites for DFW businesses that were damaged by previous redesigns done without this groundwork — and we've seen how expensive that is to fix.
Request a free website audit — we'll assess your current site against this checklist and tell you what a redesign should prioritize for your specific DFW market and business category.
Related: Web Design DFW: The Complete Guide | Web Design Cost in DFW | ThinkMents Web Design Services
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Corey Spicer
Founder & CEO, ThinkMents
20+ years pioneering digital marketing innovation. Helped generate $500M+ in client value. Google Partner building solutions that don't exist yet.
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