Pretty bad as others have said.
I first arrive on your site.. whats your Unique Selling Point? When Ive got 10 tabs open of other computer repair sites, why should I choose yours? Are you fast? friendly? insured? local? experienced?
No Basic SEO on the pages.
Cant scroll in and out on your map.
TOS and Returns Policy doesnt belong in top nav, move to bottom nav.
Its confused about what it wants to be, you have ecommerce "Add to cart" abilities, but how to people even know the issue they have? Thats YOUR job to figure out.
Some pages have centered text, which is really hard to read because the start position keeps changing. There are very few circumstances where centered text works. Usually only 20 words max.
The text is boring, I just dont want to read a block of 300 words. Break it up with headlines, subheadings, Unique Selling Points and call to actions.
Images are horribly unoptimized. For example, your diagnostics image which is appearing as roughly 300x200, is really a whopping 4527x2560. Your other service images appear to be originally LESS than 300x200ish, so they are all pixelated.
Also, you dont need WordPress, thats the lazys mans way of doing a website IMO. Although I believe your using Weebly. Which is just as bad as Wix. I say lazy mans way because I'm old school, so I code all the sites I create, so take lazy with a grain of salt.
You do need Wordpress. Grab a theme or go TechSiteBuilder.com.
Saying "You dont need Wordpress" and how he manually codes in this context, is PCMD saying to learn to code HTML/CSS, learn about SEO, mobile responsiveness, compliancy etc...
Thats like you wanting to set up a physical store and saying "You should learn be a conveyancer, concreter, plumber, brick layer, plasterer, electrician, painter, roofer". OR, you can just move into a pre-existing store where people who are better at those tasks have already done the hard work.
Just grab Wordpress, and get a nice site up and running quickly so you can start getting sales quickly. Your website is just a tool, if you were making them for OTHER people, then you would learn those dev skills.
There are also a number of mobile issues. You can expect at least 60% mobile on your tech site these days.
