You run a tight operation. You invest heavily in equipment, materials, and good people. But let’s be honest: your website has been neglected. It became an afterthought, and now it looks and functions like it was built a decade ago.
When engineers, contractors, and purchasing managers visit your site, they aren’t looking for a flashy brand story. They want technical specs, capabilities, and a fast way to request a quote. If your site is hard to navigate, they lose patience and leave.
Your website isn’t just outdated—it is an active bottleneck that makes it exhausting for buyers to give you their project.
Fill out the form to get our free, one-page diagnostic checklist. We will show you the 5 specific ways your site is frustrating buyers, and exactly how to fix them today.
Think about how your buyers work today. They do not have the time to dig through five layers of confusing menus just to find a PDF or a contact form. If your site feels like a maze, you are forcing high-value accounts to do business with whoever has the easiest website to use.
Your website is a silent salesman, but right now, it is making the buying process unnecessarily difficult.
It is usually because you are making it too hard for engineers or buyers to ask. Your website likely hides the contact button, uses a quote form that takes too long to fill out, or fails to show the customer plain proof of your capabilities and tolerances.
Do the obvious things first. Put a clear "Request a Quote" button right at the top of the page. Cut your contact form down to just the name, email, and a place to attach a file. Show them pictures and facts about jobs you have successfully run.
A good website just needs to be a helpful technical salesman. It needs to tell the buyer exactly what you make, prove that you do it well, and give them a very simple, obvious way to send you a print.