# Persona Report — help4bis.com **Repository:** help4bis/help4bis-com **Version:** 1.0 | **Created:** 26/02/2026 **Last updated:** 26/02/2026 --- ## What this report is This report looks at help4bis.com through the eyes of different types of people who might visit or use it. Each persona gets a score out of 10. A score of 10 means the site does everything they need. A score of 1 means it fails them completely. --- ## Site Overview **Business:** HELP4BIS — managed WordPress hosting for Australian small businesses **Legal entity:** Dutch Digital Dynamics Pty Ltd (ABN 86 081 237 087)**Location:** King Scrub, QLD **Phone:** 07 5221 3450 **Email:** support@help4bis.com --- ## Visitor Personas --- ### Persona 1: Sarah — The Startup Founder **Who she is:** Sarah has a new small business and needs a website. She is not technical. She found HELP4BIS through a Google search. She has a budget of around $130/month and wants someone to handle everything. **What she needs from the site:** - Understand what she gets for the money - See that the company is trustworthy - Be able to make contact easily **Her experience:** Sarah finds the Startup page (`/empower-your-start-up-journey-with-our-managed-wordpress-hosting/`) which speaks directly to her. The writing is clear and addresses her fears. She is ready to sign up. She clicks "Get Started" — and hits a 404 page. She tries the homepage CTA. Another 404. She cannot contact HELP4BIS through the website at all unless she finds the `/lets-get-started/` page independently (it is not linked from her persona page). **Score: 2/10** The content is good. The conversion is completely broken. --- ### Persona 2: Ethan — The Established SMB Owner **Who he is:** Ethan runs a 15-person trade business. His current website is slow and he gets no Google traffic. He wants a managed host that will handle updates, backups, and security, and help with SEO. **What he needs:** - Performance proof (uptime SLA, speed data) - Security specifics (what is included, how breaches are handled) - Case studies or results data - A working sales process **His experience:** The SMB page (`/elevate-your-business/`) addresses his needs in broad terms but offers no proof. "Impressive uptime" with no percentage. "Dedicated support" with no SLA. He clicks the CTA — 404. He would not proceed. **Score: 2/10** Right audience, wrong proof, broken CTA. --- ### Persona 3: Lily — The Community Group Volunteer **Who she is:** Lily manages a small not-for-profit community group's website (volunteer). She has a tiny budget and needs to understand if HELP4BIS is affordable for her situation. She is not technical at all. **What she needs:** - Clear pricing for community/not-for-profit - Plain English explanation of what is included - Reassurance that she can get help when she needs it **Her experience:** The Community Group page exists and is written well. No pricing is shown on that page, so she has to find the pricing page separately. When she does find pricing ($40–$300/month), she has no idea which tier fits her, and there is no comparison table that includes her situation. The CTA is a 404. **Score: 2/10** Right audience, no price clarity, broken CTA. --- ### Persona 4: Existing Customer Needing Support **Who they are:** Someone who is already a HELP4BIS customer and has a problem. Their website is down or they have a billing question. **What they need:** - Find the support system quickly - Log a ticket or get urgent help **Their experience:** The blog post "How to use the Support System" is linked from search results. They follow instructions and go to `/helpdesk/` — which returns a 404. They have no other way to log a ticket. The phone number (07 5221 3450) is their only option. If it is after hours, they are stuck. **Score: 0/10** Support instructions point to a 404. Complete failure for existing customers. --- ### Persona 5: SEO Researcher Finding a Blog Post **Who they are:** Someone searching "managed WordPress hosting Brisbane" or "best web hosting Australia" who lands on a blog post. **What they need:** - Find useful content - Be directed toward the product offering - Be converted to an enquiry **Their experience:** The blog post content is reasonable and professionally written. But the most recent post is from August 2023. A savvy reader will notice the date and may question whether the company is still active. If they click a CTA from the blog post, they hit a 404. **Score: 3/10** Reasonable content but dated, and conversion still broken. --- ### Persona 6: Competitor Researcher **Who they are:** Someone comparing HELP4BIS against SiteGround, WP Engine, Kinsta, or Pantheon. **What they need:** - Clear pricing - Differentiators - Proof of quality (uptime data, reviews, case studies) - Contact/trial option **Their experience:** Pricing exists on the "What do I get" page. The comparison table is present but misleading. There is no uptime SLA. No reviews. No case studies. All CTAs are 404. Compared to competitors who offer live chat, 99.9% uptime SLAs, and published reviews — HELP4BIS falls short on every proof point. **Score: 2/10** --- ## Site Average Score | Persona | Score | |---------|-------| | Sarah (Startup) | 2/10 | | Ethan (SMB Owner) | 2/10 | | Lily (Community Group) | 2/10 | | Existing Customer | 0/10 | | SEO Blog Visitor | 3/10 | | Competitor Researcher | 2/10 | | **Site Average** | **1.8/10** | --- ## Top 3 Things to Fix ### 1. Fix the broken CTAs (Critical — fixes personas 1, 2, 3, and 4 immediately) Every "Get FREE Quote" and "Select Plan" button goes to a 404. Until this is fixed, no visitor can enquire through the website. Even replacing all broken links with `/lets-get-started/` (the Forminator form page, which works) would unblock all conversion today. ### 2. Remove or redirect the spam pages (High — restores professionalism) Three pages actively damage the site's credibility: the lorem ipsum `environment-australia` page, the default WordPress `example-page`, and the COVID-19 pricing page. All three are in the sitemap and all three will lose customers who stumble onto them. Delete them. ### 3. Add trust signals (High — improves personas 2, 5, 6) The site claims strong uptime and good support but provides no proof. Add: a Google Reviews widget (if reviews exist), an uptime SLA percentage, and if possible a brief case study with real numbers (e.g., "client X saw 40% increase in leads within 3 months"). --- ## Competitor Personas --- ### Competitor A: WP Engine ($25–$400+/month USD) **What they offer:** Enterprise-grade managed WordPress hosting. 99.99% uptime SLA. 24/7 live chat and phone support. Built-in CDN, staging environment, automated backups. Global presence. **How they compare to HELP4BIS:** WP Engine is significantly more expensive and is aimed at larger businesses. HELP4BIS's $130/month full-managed offering is competitive on price for what is included. WP Engine does not offer web design — only hosting. **HELP4BIS advantage:** bundled design + hosting + local support. **Gap HELP4BIS should close:** Published uptime SLA and working support system. --- ### Competitor B: SiteGround ($2.99–$30+/month) **What they offer:** Shared WordPress hosting with cPanel. Fast servers. Strong customer reviews on G2/Trustpilot. 30-day money-back guarantee. No design or management included. **How they compare to HELP4BIS:** The $2.99 introductory price misleads the comparison. Real cost is $10–$30/month for raw hosting. A non-technical small business owner would still need to hire a designer and manage their own site. **HELP4BIS advantage:** everything included, local phone support, no technical skills required. The comparison table should make this clearer. --- ### Competitor C: Local Brisbane Web Agency (various) **What they offer:** One-off website builds for $2,000–$10,000 with ongoing maintenance at $100–$300/month. No ongoing design updates included. **How they compare to HELP4BIS:** HELP4BIS offers a subscription model that includes ongoing design changes. For a business that changes frequently (new staff, new products, updated promotions), this is potentially better value than a one-off build. **HELP4BIS advantage:** subscription model is more flexible, lower upfront cost. --- ## Suggested New Features 1. **Client portal / dashboard** — Show customers their site status, uptime, recent backups, and invoices. Even a simple WordPress-based customer area would be a strong differentiator from raw hosting providers. 2. **Live chat** — Even a basic Tidio or Crisp chat widget would let visitors ask questions without needing to find the contact page. Competitors all offer this. 3. **Self-serve plan selection** — Let customers choose a plan and pay online. The current model requires a phone call or form submission, which creates friction for the 70% of buyers who prefer to self-serve. 4. **Uptime status page** — A public status page (e.g., using Freshping or Uptime Robot) showing real-time uptime for hosted sites. This builds trust and differentiates from shared hosting. 5. **Monthly newsletter for clients** — Security bulletins, WordPress tips, and "what we did for your site this month". Keeps clients engaged and reduces churn.