I get this question a lot from business owners: "Do I really need a website if I already have a Facebook page?" It's a fair thing to ask. A Facebook page is free, it's fast to set up, and plenty of customers already live inside the app. So why pay for a website on top of it?

My honest answer is that they aren't the same thing, and they aren't competing. A Facebook page and a website do two different jobs, and the businesses that grow most reliably tend to use both. In this post I want to walk through what each one actually does well, where social-only gets risky, and how the two work together so you're not leaving money or trust on the table.

A Facebook page is not a website

This sounds obvious, but it trips people up because a Facebook page feels like a website. It has your name, your photos, your hours, maybe some reviews. For a lot of small businesses, it's the first thing people find.

The difference is ownership and control. Your Facebook page lives on someone else's platform, under someone else's rules, designed to keep people inside that platform — not necessarily to send them to you. A website is a piece of property you own. You decide what it says, how it looks, what it asks visitors to do, and where it sends them next. That distinction matters more than it seems at first.

What each one does well

I'm not anti-Facebook. Social media is genuinely good at some things a website will never do as naturally. The trick is using each tool for what it's actually built for.

What a Facebook page is great at

What a website is great at

The risks of going social-only

Here's where I want to be direct, because this is the part that catches owners off guard. Relying only on a Facebook page comes with some real downsides — most of them out of your hands.

None of this means Facebook is bad. It means building your whole business on rented land is a risk you don't have to take.

What a website does that social can't

When I build a site for a client, the goal isn't just "look nice online." It's to give them things a social page structurally cannot provide.

If you want to see what that looks like in practice, I break down the kinds of builds I do on my services page, and I've tailored approaches for different fields over on the industries page.

How they work best together

This is the real point I want owners to take away: it was never a versus. A website and a Facebook page are a team, and each plays a position.

Think of it this way — social media is how people find you, and your website is where you close the deal. Facebook is great at top-of-funnel: catching attention, sparking interest, building familiarity. But a feed is a noisy place to ask someone to book an appointment or fill out a detailed form. That's your website's job.

So the flow looks like this:

  1. Social drives traffic. A post, photo, or ad catches someone's eye and gets them curious.
  2. Your website converts. They click through to a focused page that answers their questions and makes the next step easy.
  3. You own the relationship. Once they're on your site, you can capture the lead, take the booking, or start the conversation — on property you control.

Used together, your social page feeds your website, and your website turns that attention into actual business. One brings the crowd; the other does the work.

My simple recommendation

If you're starting from a Facebook page, you're not behind — you've got a head start on the discovery side. Keep posting and engaging there. But I'd treat your website as the foundation everything else points to, not an optional extra.

Practically, that means: get a real domain, build a clean site that covers your services and makes contacting you effortless, and then use Facebook to send people toward it. Your social page becomes the front door, and your website becomes the room where deals actually happen. You don't have to do it all at once — even a focused, well-built site is a big step up from social alone.

The bottom line

A Facebook page and a website aren't rivals, and you don't have to choose. Social is fantastic for reach, conversation, and staying visible. A website is where you own your presence, get found on Google, control the experience, and turn interest into customers. The businesses that win online usually do the unglamorous thing: they use both, on purpose, with each doing the job it's best at.

If you've outgrown the "just a Facebook page" stage and you want a site that actually pulls its weight, that's exactly the kind of work I do — one client at a time, built to fit how your business runs.

Ready to own your corner of the internet?

I'll help you build a website that turns the attention your social media earns into real, booked business. No pressure — just a straight conversation about what would actually help.

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