Portfolio audit + fix

Mobile action path

The mobile path had visible actions, but the preferred next step was not obvious enough for patients with different intent levels.

Mobile first bookingPatient-path auditFix plan

Public-path proof

Before friction, the finding, and the cleaned-up path.

Source basis: public website, listing, mobile route, and contact path

Built from visible website/listing route patterns: visual enough to inspect quickly, specific enough for the front desk to act on.

Before path

Mobile action path

1Mobile first screen2Large content block3Action below competing detail4Patient scrolls to decide

Friction point: The mobile page has actions, but the first screen does not make the preferred next step unmistakable for high-intent patients.

Steward Snapshot

Annotated finding

Source reviewed
Mobile homepage first screen, header action, request/contact route, trust cue placement
Patient impact
Mobile users may scroll, skim, or call vaguely because the correct action is not immediately obvious.
Front-desk consequence
Front desk receives calls and forms with less context about new patient, urgent issue, or service need.
Cleanup direction
Move phone/request actions and one trust cue into the first mobile decision area; route by intent before long copy.
Fixed path

Cleaned-up route

1Call now visible2Request appointment visible3One trust cue beside CTA4Intent chosen before form

Outcome: The public path tells the patient what to do next and gives the front desk cleaner intent before follow-up.

Representative public-path artifact. Built from visible route patterns only — no PHI, no private analytics, no unsupported growth or revenue claims.

Before → after

What would change for the patient and the front desk.

Before
  • First-screen actions competed instead of guiding the patient.
  • Routine booking and urgent contact were not clearly separated.
  • Trust cues appeared after the action instead of before it.
After
  • Mobile action bar separates Call, Book, and Request by intent.
  • Urgent language sits beside the phone action.
  • Compact trust proof appears before the form.

Recommended fixes

  • Create a sticky mobile action bar with Call, Book, and Request separated by intent.

  • Put emergency/urgent copy immediately near the phone action.

  • Add a compact trust strip before the request form.

  • Reduce heavy above-the-fold media and keep service shortcuts visible.

Audit matrix

Full path, not CTA theater.

Each row connects public evidence to patient hesitation and front-desk recovery work.

AreaEvidence checkedFindingPatient impactFront-desk consequence
Mobile UXMobile search result, first screen, CTA stackThe first useful action competes with secondary actions.Patients may pause, scroll, or choose the wrong route.Front desk receives less specific intent.
ConversionCall, book, request, contact routeRoutine booking and urgent contact need clearer separation.Patients with different needs enter the same channel.Staff must triage before scheduling.
TrustMobile proof before actionReview/team/comfort cues should be visible before deeper intake.Patients may hesitate on mobile before committing.More calls arrive to ask basic trust questions.
ServicesMobile service discoveryHigh-intent services need faster mobile discovery.Patients may not see that the practice treats their need.Staff gets calls asking about services already offered.
PerformanceHero assets and third-party scriptsMobile should avoid heavy assets before phone/booking actions.Slow path reduces confidence and completion.More patients default to calling without context.

Want one of these for your practice?

Steward reviews one public patient path first, then turns it into a focused cleanup plan.