Business scan
We look at the current online presence, Google listing, reviews, competitors, services, customer urgency, and the obvious gaps in trust or clarity.
Process
Every site starts with the same question: what does a real customer need to see before they trust this business enough to reach out?
A simple website can still be deeply considered. The work is research, structure, writing, design, build quality, and launch polish compressed into a clear fixed-scope project.
We look at the current online presence, Google listing, reviews, competitors, services, customer urgency, and the obvious gaps in trust or clarity.
The website is mapped around the strongest service message, most important proof points, and the contact action that should happen next.
A practical direction shows where the customer path can become sharper before moving into the final build.
The page is built with responsive layout, clean spacing, practical content, trust sections, and contact paths that work on mobile and desktop.
Final checks cover layout, links, images, metadata, mobile fit, basic search structure, and the handoff needed to get the site live.
Good copy starts with the customer. We want to understand what they are worried about, what they need fixed, and what proof makes them comfortable enough to reach out.
Emergency repair, quote comparison, recurring service, project planning, seasonal work, or trust check before calling.
The most profitable or urgent service should not be buried. The page should lead with the strongest commercial opportunity.
Reviews, experience, warranties, licensing, local familiarity, project photos, response speed, and plain-language guarantees.
The final site has to feel finished. That means it cannot just look good in one screenshot; it needs to hold up when someone scrolls, reads, clicks, and checks on mobile.
Text spacing, sections, buttons, images, and hierarchy are checked across screen sizes.
The page should explain real services and real customer concerns, not generic agency language.
Email, quote, call, or booking prompts should be obvious without crowding the page.
Metadata, favicons, sitemap, responsive images, and links are checked before publish.
A good website should make the business easier to understand, easier to trust, and easier to contact. That is the standard we build toward.
The quickest start is a business name, current website if one exists, and the main service you want customers to notice.