Your Mobile Site Is Probably Losing 53% of Visitors

Google found that 53% of mobile users leave sites that take over 3 seconds to load. We build mobile web experiences that load fast and convert on real-world connections.

Mobile Web Design

Mobile-optimized web experiences that load fast, feel native to touch devices, and convert visitors on smartphones and tablets.

What's Included

Everything you get with our Mobile Web Design

Mobile-First Responsive Design

Layouts designed for the smallest screen first, then progressively enhanced for tablets and desktop -- not the other way around.

Performance Optimization

Image compression, code splitting, critical CSS inlining, and asset optimization to meet Google's Core Web Vitals thresholds on mobile networks.

Touch Interaction Design

Tap targets sized to Apple's 44pt minimum, thumb-zone-optimized navigation placement, and swipe-friendly content patterns.

Mobile Usability Testing

Testing on actual smartphones across iOS and Android to verify that designs work in real mobile conditions, not just browser emulators.

How We Design Mobile Web Experiences

1

Mobile Analytics Audit

We analyze your existing mobile traffic data -- device types, viewport sizes, connection speeds, bounce rates by page, and conversion funnels -- to identify exactly where mobile users are dropping off and why.

2

Content Priority Mapping

Mobile screens force prioritization. We determine what content and actions matter most on each page type, then structure the layout so the most important elements are immediately visible without scrolling.

3

Mobile-First Wireframing

We design layouts starting from the smallest screen, placing navigation and CTAs within thumb reach zones and sizing all interactive elements to meet minimum touch target standards (44pt on iOS, 48dp on Android).

4

Visual Design and Responsive Scaling

We apply your brand identity to mobile wireframes, then define how each layout scales through breakpoints to tablet and desktop. Every breakpoint is tested with real content, not placeholder text.

5

Performance Testing on Real Networks

We test load times on throttled 3G and 4G connections using real devices, not just Chrome DevTools. Assets are optimized until the site meets Google's Core Web Vitals thresholds under real mobile conditions.

6

Launch, Measure, and Iterate

After launch, we monitor mobile-specific metrics -- bounce rate, conversion rate, time-on-task for key flows -- and make targeted refinements based on real user data from the first 30 days.

Key Benefits

Visitors Stay Instead of Bouncing

Faster load times and instantly usable layouts keep mobile visitors on your site past that critical 3-second threshold where 53% of users typically leave. Reducing bounce rate means more people see your value proposition.

Higher SEO Rankings Through Mobile-First Indexing

Google uses the mobile version of your site as the primary version for indexing and ranking. A well-designed mobile experience directly improves your search visibility, while a poor one actively hurts it regardless of desktop quality.

More Conversions From Existing Traffic

Thumb-friendly forms, visible CTAs, and streamlined flows remove the friction that causes mobile cart abandonment rates to hit 85.65%. You get more revenue from the traffic you already have without spending more on acquisition.

Users Come Back

Google reports that 61% of users won't return to a mobile site that gave them trouble. A well-designed mobile experience earns repeat visits, reducing your dependence on paid traffic to bring people back.

Research & Evidence

Backed by industry research and proven results

Restaurant Chain Reduced Mobile Bounce Rate 44% With Speed Optimization

B2B SaaS Company Increased Mobile Lead Captures 89%

Professional Services Firm Saw 2.8x Mobile Conversions After Redesign

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between responsive design and mobile-first design?

Responsive design typically starts with a desktop layout and adds CSS rules to rearrange it on smaller screens. Mobile-first design starts with the mobile layout as the foundation and adds complexity as screens get larger. The difference matters because mobile-first forces you to prioritize content and simplify flows for the most constrained environment, rather than trying to fit desktop complexity into a small screen.

How much does page speed actually affect conversions?

Significantly. Google's research shows that as load time goes from 1 second to 3 seconds, bounce probability increases 32%. From 1 second to 5 seconds, it increases 90%. For e-commerce sites, even a 0.1-second improvement in load time can increase conversion rates. We treat speed as a design requirement, not a technical afterthought.

Will redesigning for mobile break our desktop experience?

No. Mobile-first design builds upward -- the desktop experience gets more layout options, larger images, and additional content as screen space allows. Your desktop users see an enhanced experience while mobile users get one that was purpose-built for their constraints.

How do you handle content-heavy pages on mobile?

We use progressive disclosure patterns -- expandable sections, tabbed content, and summary-first layouts that let users drill into detail when they want it. The key is showing enough content to answer the primary question immediately, with clear paths to deeper information.

60% of Your Visitors Are on Phones Right Now

Find out how your mobile experience stacks up with a free performance and usability audit.