How to Get More RFQs From a Manufacturing Website


How to Get More RFQs From a Manufacturing Website

Quick Answer: Most manufacturer websites don’t have an RFQ conversion problem — they have an RFQ path problem. Engineers and procurement managers who land on your site already want to buy. If they can’t find your quote form fast, or don’t trust what they see when they do, they leave. Fix the path, reduce friction, and make it obvious why they should send you a drawing.

Why Are Manufacturers Getting Traffic But No RFQs?

This is the most common situation for industrial manufacturers with an established web presence: Google Analytics shows a few hundred sessions per month, maybe more, but the sales team isn’t getting inquiries from the site. The knee-jerk reaction is to spend more on ads or redesign the whole site. Usually neither of those is the right move first.

Traffic isn’t the problem when someone searches “CNC turning shop Michigan” and clicks your site. They’re already a buyer. The problem is what happens in the next 10 seconds.

Buyers in manufacturing have short patience for websites that make them work. If an engineer has to click three times to find a quote form, or if your homepage is wall-to-wall company history and no capability proof, they’ll go to the next result. The search was the easy part. The website is where you lose them.

Before blaming your traffic volume, look at your RFQ path. How many clicks does it take to get from the homepage to a submitted quote? If it’s more than two, that’s your problem.

What Does a High-Converting Manufacturing RFQ Page Actually Look Like?

The form itself matters less than what surrounds it. A bare-bones “Submit a Quote” page with nothing but fields is asking someone to trust you with their project before you’ve given them any reason to. That works fine if they already know your name. It doesn’t work for traffic from search.

A high-converting RFQ page for a manufacturer does a few specific things:

It answers the question a buyer is asking before they fill anything out. That means tolerances, materials, certifications (ISO, AS9100, ITAR if applicable), lead times, and order minimums — visible on the page, not buried in a PDF. A procurement manager deciding between three shops will read this. If yours doesn’t have it, you’ve already given an edge to whoever does.

It gives social proof that reduces risk. Not a generic “we’re a trusted partner” line — actual evidence. A few customer logos from recognizable OEMs. A case study showing a specific problem and measurable outcome. A photo of your floor with equipment visible. Manufacturing buyers buy from manufacturers they can picture. Abstract credibility statements don’t do that job.

It makes the ask clear. “Request a Quote” is better than “Contact Us.” “Upload Your Drawing” is better than “Tell Us About Your Project.” Specificity signals that you’ve done this before. A vague ask signals that the form is going into someone’s inbox and sitting there.

If you’re not sure how your current RFQ experience stacks up, the RFQ Readiness Scorecard will walk you through it — it scores your site across three areas: getting found, converting visitors, and following up on inquiries.

How Do You Reduce Friction in the RFQ Process?

Friction is anything that makes a buyer hesitate or stop. In manufacturing, it shows up in a few predictable places.

The biggest one is file uploads. Engineers submit drawings. If your form doesn’t accept DXF, STEP, PDF, or DWG files, or if there’s a file size limit so small it rejects a typical CAD file, you’ve broken the process at the most critical moment. Test this. Upload an actual part drawing to your own form and see what happens.

The second-biggest is form length. If you’re asking for budget, timeline, company revenue, and how they heard about you before they’ve even told you what they need — you’re losing them. Ask for: name, email, phone, company, part description, material, quantity, and drawing upload. Everything else can come after the first conversation.

Phone numbers on every page reduce friction for buyers who aren’t ready to fill out a form. A lot of first contacts in manufacturing are still phone calls. If your number is only in the footer, or only on the Contact page, you’re making that harder than it needs to be.

Response time is also a friction point, just on your end. A buyer who submits an RFQ and doesn’t hear back in 24 hours is probably also waiting on two or three other shops. The shop that responds fastest with a real answer wins the quoting conversation. Automation can help here — even a simple acknowledgment email that confirms receipt, previews next steps, and sets a realistic turnaround expectation gives you an edge over shops with no response system at all.

What Role Does SEO Play in Manufacturing Lead Generation?

Search is still how most engineers find a new supplier when their current one can’t handle a job. “CNC machining shop [city],” “contract metal fabrication ISO certified,” “aluminum extrusion supplier OEM” — these are buyer-intent searches with no comparison shopping mentality behind them. Someone typing that needs a quote this week.

Ranking for those terms requires the basics: pages that are explicitly about the capability being searched, with location signals if geography matters, and technical detail that demonstrates you actually do the work. A homepage that says “full-service manufacturing solutions” ranks for nothing specific. A page titled “Precision CNC Turning for Aerospace Components — [Your City]” has a shot.

The SEO and AEO work we do for manufacturers is built around this: get the right pages in front of the right buyers, so that when traffic does arrive, it’s already qualified. Sending unqualified traffic to a broken RFQ path is a waste of both. Sending qualified traffic to a clean RFQ path compounds over time.

One thing worth watching in 2025 and beyond: AI-generated search answers are showing up before the organic blue links for a lot of manufacturing queries. If your site doesn’t have clear, structured content that directly answers the questions buyers are asking — capabilities, certifications, lead times, order minimums — you won’t get cited in those answers. That’s a separate optimization layer from traditional SEO, but it matters more every month.

Should Manufacturers Use Paid Ads for RFQ Generation?

Yes, if the basics are already in place. Paid search — Google Ads specifically — puts your quote form in front of buyers the day a campaign goes live. There’s no waiting for organic rankings. For a shop entering a new market, adding a capability, or needing RFQs now rather than in six months, it’s usually the right tool.

The math is straightforward. If a won job averages $40,000 and you close 25% of the RFQs you receive, each RFQ is worth $10,000 in expected revenue. If a Google Ads campaign generates two extra RFQs per month at a $2,000/month budget, that’s $20,000 in expected revenue on a $2,000 spend. The question is never “can we afford ads” — it’s “can we afford to not capture buyers who are actively searching for what we make.”

The risk with paid search is that it accelerates whatever is already happening on your site. If the RFQ path has friction, you’ll spend money sending buyers to a form they abandon. That’s why we do Google Ads management for manufacturers alongside conversion work, not instead of it. Traffic and conversion are the same problem looked at from two directions.


Frequently Asked Questions

How many clicks should it take to reach an RFQ form on a manufacturing website?

One or two. The form should be reachable from the homepage in a single click — either from the main navigation or a prominent CTA button. If a buyer has to find a "Contact" page and then look for a quote option from there, you're losing them. Put "Request a Quote" in the nav and link it to a dedicated RFQ page, not a generic contact form.

What fields should a manufacturing RFQ form include?

Name, email, phone, company name, part description, material, quantity, and a file upload for drawings. That's it for a first-contact form. Asking for budget, project timeline, or how they heard about you before the relationship exists increases abandonment. Collect secondary information on the follow-up call.

How fast should a manufacturer respond to an online RFQ?

Within one business day, ideally the same day. Buyers in manufacturing typically request quotes from two or three shops at once. The first shop to respond with a substantive reply — not just "we got your message" — has a meaningful advantage in the sales conversation. Automated acknowledgment emails that confirm receipt and set a clear response expectation are worth the half-hour it takes to set them up.

Does paid search actually work for manufacturing lead generation?

Yes, for shops where the math supports it. Google Ads generates buyer-intent traffic the day the campaign launches. It's best suited for manufacturers with defined capabilities, a real RFQ process, and jobs worth at least $10,000–$15,000 average order value — anything lower and the cost-per-click economics get tight. The bigger risk is running ads before the RFQ path on the website is clean.

What's the difference between a lead and an RFQ for a manufacturer?

A lead is contact information from someone who showed interest. An RFQ is a specific request from a buyer who has a part to produce and wants your price. They're not interchangeable. Most manufacturers should be measuring RFQ volume and close rate, not "leads generated." A hundred form submissions from tire-kickers is worth less than five RFQs from qualified OEM procurement contacts.


About the Author

Jacob Lett is the founder of Bootstrap Creative, a digital marketing consultancy that helps Michigan manufacturers generate qualified leads through HubSpot, technical SEO, and Google Ads. With over a decade of hands-on experience, he acts as a direct partner for B2B companies seeking measurable ROI from their marketing investment.



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