A counselling website that speaks to the people you most want to help
People looking for a counsellor are often in a vulnerable place. They're searching carefully, reading closely and making a judgement about whether they can trust you before they've ever made contact. Your website needs to meet them where they are - not showcase your qualifications at them.
This page is about helping you think through what your counselling website needs to do, who it needs to reach and how to give it the best possible chance of being found by the right people on Google.
A counselling website is not a CV - it's a first conversation
The most effective counselling websites are built around empathy first, credentials second. Potential clients want to feel understood before they want to feel impressed. The site that makes someone think "this person gets what I'm going through" will always outperform the one that leads with qualifications and modalities.
Designing around your ideal client
Before you think about your website, it's worth spending time thinking about the specific person you most want to work with. Not the broadest possible client base - the person you do your best work with. What are they carrying? How do they talk about it to themselves? What would make them trust a counsellor enough to reach out?
Those answers directly shape your site. A counsellor who specialises in anxiety in young professionals needs different copy, a different tone and different page structure from one who works primarily with people experiencing grief and loss - even if both offer person-centred counselling in the same town.
The more clearly you can picture your ideal client, the more directly your website can speak to them. Specificity builds trust faster than trying to appeal to everyone.
Each presenting issue you name explicitly on your site can help it appear in searches for that specific difficulty - and helps the right clients recognise themselves in your content.
How clients search for a counsellor
People searching for a counsellor often start with what they're experiencing rather than what they need professionally. They search for help with anxiety, relationship problems, or grief - not for "person-centred counsellor" or "integrative approach". Understanding this gap between how clients search and how counsellors describe themselves is one of the most useful things you can do before building a site.
The most effective counselling websites bridge this gap - using the language clients use to describe their difficulty while also being clear about your professional qualifications and approach.
Counselling is one of the most searched-for mental health services in the UK. The competition at a broad level is fierce - but at a specialism and location level, many counsellors in mid-sized towns and cities can rank on page one with a properly built, well-structured site. The key is targeting the right terms from the start.
Your BACP or UKCP directory listing is also a valuable backlink to your site. Make sure your listing links directly to your website - it's a free backlink from a trusted, authoritative domain that Google takes seriously.
Getting the foundations right before you build
Two decisions made before a site is built have a disproportionate effect on how it performs - your domain name and your site structure. Both are much harder to change once the site is established. Getting them right from the start saves significant time and effort later.
Choosing your domain name
Your domain name is one of the few things about your website that genuinely matters before you build - because it affects your SEO, your professional identity and how memorable the site is for word-of-mouth referrals. It's worth getting right before you start.
Works well for practices built on personal referral. Easy for existing clients and GPs to remember and recommend. Less useful for cold Google searches unless you have strong local name recognition.
Works well if you want a brand identity beyond your own name - or if you might eventually grow a team. The word "counselling" in the domain name gives a modest SEO advantage over a completely abstract name.
Includes your key search terms directly - specialism and location. Gives a genuine SEO advantage for those specific searches. Most effective when the domain still reads naturally rather than being a forced string of keywords.
Using AI to plan your content and structure
Some counsellors find AI tools useful in the planning stage - not as a replacement for genuine reflection or professional writing, but as a way of thinking through the structure of the site and the questions each page needs to answer.
If you're open to trying it, the most useful approach is to use an AI tool as a questioning partner rather than a content generator. Ask it to interview you about your practice - to draw out the specifics of who you work with, how you work and what makes your approach distinctive. The output of that process is useful planning material, not finished copy.
AI tools tend to produce generic, sanitised language that feels impersonal on counselling websites. Clients reading your site are looking for a human being they might trust with difficult things - and AI copy rarely conveys that. Use AI for planning and structure, then write or commission the actual copy in your own voice.
"I'm a counsellor specialising in [x]. Ask me questions to help me get specific about who my ideal client is and what they need to hear from my website."
"Based on what I've told you about my counselling practice, what pages should my website have and what should each one cover to work well for SEO and for potential clients?"
"What might someone be thinking and feeling when they search for a counsellor for [presenting issue]? What would they need to see on a website to feel safe enough to make contact?"
"What search terms might someone use when looking for a counsellor with my specialism in my location? List specific phrases I could target on my site."
AI tools are one option - not a requirement. The same thinking happens naturally in a good conversation with a designer who knows the sector. A free consultation achieves the same planning outcome without needing any technology.
A conversation that's useful whether you work with me or not
I've worked with counsellors at every stage - from those building their first website to those redesigning a site that isn't working. In almost every case, the most valuable thing I can offer before any work begins is a straightforward conversation about who the site needs to reach, what it needs to say and whether it can realistically compete for the search terms that matter.
That conversation is free. I'm genuinely happy to give advice that helps you make a better decision - even if that decision is to build the site yourself, use a different designer or hold off for now. A counsellor with a well-planned site is good for the profession, and I care about that.
I'll help you get specific about your ideal client and how your site should be written to reach them - in language that builds trust rather than just listing credentials.
I'll look at the specific terms you could target and give you an honest picture of the competition in your area and specialism.
What pages you need, what each one should cover and how to structure the site so it works for both Google and the clients reading it.
If you haven't registered a domain I'll give you specific advice on what would serve your practice best - for SEO, for referrals and for your professional identity.
A straightforward view of what makes sense for your practice - including whether working with me is the right fit for you.
"I run a therapy centre. I understand what it means to build a practice from scratch and how much it matters to attract the right clients. A website built around that understanding is worth having - and a conversation about what that looks like costs nothing."
A focused conversation about your counselling practice website - what it needs, what's realistic and what it would cost. No obligation either way.
Book a free consultation Send a message instead"Clive rebuilt my website which involved a lot of liaison with the previous host and getting round tricky issues. Since then I have gained more clients. I would highly recommend him."
"He redesigned my old website making it look very professional and improving the SEO significantly. He went the extra mile and was very flexible throughout."