You do not need to fix the whole thing in one dramatic burst of digital righteousness.
Please do not do that to yourself.
Start smaller.
1. Figure out what actually matters now
What pages, offers, and content are still relevant to the business you have today?
Not three rebrands ago. Not two pivots ago. Not that lovely idea you had in a fit of optimism and never fully used.
Now.
2. Identify the obvious clutter
Old pages. Duplicate drafts. Unused images. Abandoned ideas. Expired announcements. Offers you do not even want anymore.
You do not have to delete everything immediately. This is not a purge montage.
But you do need to know what is taking up space.
3. Map the core structure
What are your main pages?
What do visitors most need to find?
What do you most need to update regularly?
That gives you a practical picture of what the site is actually supposed to support.
4. Notice where you feel resistance
Which tasks always feel more annoying than they should?
That is usually where the mess is costing you the most.
Pay attention to the spots that make you sigh before you even click. Your nervous system knows things.
5. Stop treating every website problem like a personal flaw
A messy website is usually what happens when a real business grows in real time and nobody gets around to rebuilding the plumbing because they are busy trying to run the actual business.
That is not a character defect.
That is maintenance catching up with you in ugly shoes.