A photographer asked me whether she needed a full website or just a single page. She had a clear portfolio on Instagram, got most clients through referrals, and mainly needed somewhere to send people who asked “do you have a website?”
I told her: start with one page. She did. It’s working perfectly.
What’s a landing page?
A landing page is a single-page website. Everything on one scrollable page: who you are, what you do, your work, pricing, contact info. No subpages, no complex navigation.
Think of it as a digital business card on steroids.
When a landing page is enough
- You’re a solo service provider (photographer, consultant, designer, tutor)
- Your offerings are simple enough to explain in 500 words
- Your main goal is credibility (“yes, I have a website”) rather than SEO traffic
- You get most clients through referrals or social media, not Google search
- Budget is tight and you want to start somewhere
When you need a full website
- You have multiple products or services that each need their own page
- You want to rank on Google for different search terms (each page targets different keywords)
- You need a blog or content section for SEO
- You have a team with individual profiles
- You’re in hospitality (hotel, restaurant) where menus, rooms, and galleries need space
- You’re selling products online
The progression path
Here’s the smart approach for budget-conscious businesses:
- Month 1: Launch a landing page with your core info
- Month 3–6: Add a services page with more detail
- Month 6–12: Add a blog/insights section
- Year 2: Expand into a full multi-page site
This way you’re online immediately without overspending. You grow the site as the business grows.
Services like Kisimenti offer both landing pages and full websites, so you can start small and upgrade without rebuilding from scratch.
A landing page today is infinitely better than a full website “someday.” Start with what you can, then build from there.