The Only 5 Pages a Solo Practitioner Website Needs

If you’re a solo practitioner in West Virginia, your website does not need to be fancy.

It needs to be clear, trustworthy, and functional.

Most solo lawyers overthink websites because they assume:

  • More pages = more credibility
  • More content = better marketing

In reality, five well-done pages do more for client trust than a bloated site no one reads.


The 5 Pages Every Solo Law Firm Website Needs

1. Home Page — What You Do, Who You Help, Where You Practice

Your homepage answers one question immediately:

“Am I in the right place?”

Must-have elements

  • Practice area(s) in plain English
  • Geographic focus (WV, counties, cities)
  • A clear phone number
  • A simple call to action (“Call for a consultation”)

What to avoid

  • Long philosophical introductions
  • Law school credentials up top
  • Legal jargon

Think clarity, not cleverness.


2. About Page — Credibility Without the Autobiography

Clients want reassurance, not your life story.

Include

  • Your name and role
  • WV bar admission
  • Years in practice (if applicable)
  • A short, human explanation of how you approach cases

Keep it grounded

  • One professional photo (not a stock image)
  • Straightforward tone
  • No exaggeration

Trust comes from plain confidence, not hype.


3. Practice Areas Page — Problems, Not Statutes

This page should sound like how clients describe their issues, not how lawyers classify them.

Good structure

  • One short section per practice area
  • Who you help
  • What problems you handle
  • What clients can expect

Example:

“I help individuals in West Virginia with uncontested divorces, custody agreements, and family-law matters that don’t require prolonged litigation.”


4. Contact Page — Make It Easy to Call You

This page should reduce friction, not add it.

Must-have

  • Phone number (clickable on mobile)
  • Contact form (simple)
  • Counties or regions served
  • Office location or service area

Optional

  • Office hours
  • “What to expect when you call”

If a potential client can’t figure out how to contact you in 10 seconds, they move on.


5. Disclaimer / Privacy Page — Quiet Professionalism

This page doesn’t sell—but it signals competence.

Include

  • Attorney advertising disclaimer (if applicable)
  • No attorney-client relationship disclaimer
  • Privacy policy for contact forms

Clients may never read it, but its presence matters.

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