You've decided it's time to get your business online, and Linktree was probably the first thing someone recommended. It's free, it takes two minutes, and it gives you one tidy link for your Instagram bio. For a lot of businesses that's where the online presence begins — and there's nothing wrong with that as a starting point.
The trouble shows up a few weeks in, when you realise the link is getting clicks but not many bookings. Linktree was designed for creators and influencers who need to send followers to lots of different places — a new video, a merch store, a podcast, a newsletter. A Linktree for service business use case is different: you don't need people to go to ten places, you need them to do one thing — book you. That mismatch is where most of the mistakes below come from.
Last updated: June 2026
This is a neutral rundown of the five most common mistakes service businesses make leaning on Linktree, and a fair look at what the alternatives — Beacons, Carrd, Calendly, Setmore, and a dedicated booking page — actually do differently.
Mistake 1: Treating a link list as a booking system
The biggest one. A Linktree is a menu of links, not a place where a transaction happens. So a visitor taps your bio, lands on a list, taps "Book now," gets sent to a second tool, waits for it to load, then finally picks a time. Every extra step leaks people.
The fix is to remove steps, not add buttons. A booking-first page does the scheduling on the page itself. Schedulers like Calendly, Setmore, and Acuity put the calendar front and centre, and a booking page like EchoSlam combines a profile and a live booking calendar in one place. The principle is the same: for a service business, the page's job is to take the appointment, not to point at the place where appointments are taken.
Mistake 2: Looking like a creator, not a business
Linktree pages have a recognisable look, and that look reads as "influencer," not "professional you'd pay money to." For a hair stylist, a physio, a tutor, or a consultant, the page is often the first impression — and a generic link list undersells you.
This is where the closer Linktree-style alternatives matter. Beacons offers more design flexibility and a creator-business feel, and Carrd lets you build a genuinely custom one-page site for a few dollars a year. Both look more like your brand than a default Linktree. A booking page goes further by framing the whole thing around your services, prices, and availability, so the first impression is "here's what I do and here's how to book it" rather than "here are some links."
Mistake 3: Making people leave the page to pay
Service businesses lose a surprising amount of money to deposits that never get collected and no-shows that never get charged. Linktree doesn't take payments for appointments, so if you want a deposit you're bolting on yet another tool and yet another click.
Tools built around bookings handle this natively. Calendly, Setmore, Acuity, and EchoSlam can all attach payment or deposit collection to a booking, so the money and the appointment are captured in the same flow. If taking a card up front matters to your business — and for anyone burned by no-shows it usually does — a Linktree for service business setup will always be one tool short.
Mistake 4: Flying blind on what's actually working
A plain Linktree tells you clicks. Clicks are not customers. You can't see which service gets booked most, when your busy times are, or how many visitors turned into appointments — because the booking happens somewhere else, on a different tool that isn't talking to your link page.
Scheduling-first tools close that loop. Because the booking lives on the same platform as the page, Setmore, Acuity, and EchoSlam can show you bookings, busy periods, and repeat clients rather than raw taps. That's the difference between knowing your link is popular and knowing your business is growing.
Mistake 5: Stacking three tools when one would do
Add it up and the typical Linktree-based setup is Linktree for the link, plus Calendly or Setmore for scheduling, plus a payment tool for deposits. Three logins, three subscriptions, and three things to keep in sync — assembled by someone who just wanted to get booked.
There's nothing wrong with stacking tools if each one is pulling its weight. But for most solo operators and small service businesses, a single booking page does the job of all three: a professional public page, live scheduling, and payments in one place. Fewer moving parts, one bill, one thing to update when your hours change.
How the alternatives compare (2026)
| Tool | Starting price | Free tier? | Takes bookings on the page? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Linktree | Free, then ~$5–$24/mo | Yes | No (links out) | Creators with many destinations |
| Beacons | Free, then ~$10/mo | Yes | No (links out) | Creator-businesses wanting design control |
| Carrd | ~$9–$49/year | Yes (basic) | No (links out) | A cheap, custom one-page site |
| Calendly | Free, then ~$10/mo | Yes (limited) | Yes (scheduling-first) | Meetings and call bookings |
| Setmore | Free, then ~$12/mo | Yes (up to 4 users) | Yes | Budget scheduling for small teams |
| EchoSlam | Free, then ~$12.90/mo (Pro) | Yes | Yes | A public page + bookings in one |
Prices move around, so treat these as 2026 ballparks. The useful pattern isn't the exact number — it's the column that says whether bookings happen on the page. Linktree, Beacons, and Carrd are link/page tools that send you elsewhere to book. Calendly and Setmore are schedulers that book but aren't really a public profile. A booking page tries to be both at once.
So when does Linktree still make sense?
Plenty of times. If you're a creator pointing fans at a dozen different things, Linktree is genuinely the right tool and these "mistakes" don't apply to you. It's also a perfectly good free placeholder while you figure out what you need. The mistakes only bite when a service business uses a link list as the engine for getting booked — a job it was never designed to do.
If you mostly need people to find you, trust you, and book you, the shortest path is a page that does all three in one step. That's the gap a dedicated booking page fills, and it's why a Linktree for service business setup so often ends with owners adding tools on top until they may as well have started with a booking page in the first place.
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