Does Your Website STAND OUT From the Competition?
You’re losing customers because your website sucks
How much is one new customer worth to you?
$100? $500?
If you’re in a Home & Garden industry like roofing, siding, remodeling…you’re selling projects worth $1,000, $5,000, $10,000 and much higher.
Good leads are valuable, and top companies in your industry don’t hesitate to spend money on getting in front of them.
The main battleground is online and your website plays a critical role.
She Needed Her Own
MARKETING DEPARTMENT
How much is one new customer worth to you?
$100? $500?
If you’re in a Home & Garden industry like roofing, siding, remodeling…you’re selling projects worth $1,000, $5,000, $10,000 and much higher.
Good leads are valuable, and top companies in your industry don’t hesitate to spend money on getting in front of them.
The main battleground is online and your website plays a critical role.
Websites are the critical battleground where a majority of leads decide who to contact.
Think about that, you might not even get a chance at new business because your website sucks.
Even worse, what if your website sucks and you’re losing customers…and you don’t even know it sucks?
If a potential customer visits your website and the website of another company, who wins?
Your website is the first line in the battle ground for local business.
Meet Rachel.
Rachel is the office manager of a granite countertop company.
The company had grown over the past few years, hiring more staff, moving to a larger shop and opening up a showroom.
But their website was still the same basic 3 webpages that hadn’t been updated, and didn’t help their customers
She Needed Her Own
MARKETING DEPARTMENT
If this sounds like your business, you aren’t alone.
Maybe you’re the office manager with marketing responsibilities.
Maybe you’re the business owner with too much on your plate.
Maybe you’re the marketing person and don’t have a clear direction.
What if someone could take care of it so you could focus on running the business?
Re-design Your Website to STAND OUT From the Competition!
Get a fresh new website that your customers will love,
and your competitors will envy
You have a website, why would you “waste” money on a new website?
There are a few common reasons you need a new website:
- You’ve lost touch with the person who made your website
- You aren’t happy with the look of your current website
- You need to update your website as your business has grown
- You know your website doesn’t represent your business anymore
- You want more leads from your website
- Your technology is outdated / insecure (Although you might not know it)
Whatever the reason, you know you’re current website needs an update.
- Maybe you’ve looked at your top competitor’s websites and feel like yours isn’t good enough?
- Maybe it’s been 5 years since your website has been updated? (That’s 35 years in website years, kind of like dog years…)
- Maybe you’ve been learning about digital marketing and see that your current website isn’t doing it’s job
Your website needs to be updated, now what?
A Success Story
Trend Stone Re-brand Story
Story about Grady and also Rachel as office manager / doing marketing with no experience or time.
Before and After:
- Logo
- Website
- Brochure
I want to personally thank you for the wonderful job you did on our brochure, business cards, and info postcard. I was just looking for something informational, what I received was the beginning of a marketing package. The three items fit together so perfectly and unintentionally started branding our company immediately. I can’t explain how great you were at taking a few simple ideas and molding them into exactly what we needed, although we didn’t even know it!
The True Cost of a Website
I’ve talked to many people in search of quotes for the price or cost of a new website.
It’s a shock to find a huge difference in price.
I had a recent conversation where they were quoted $500, $5,000, and $15,000 for a website re-design.
How can a novice tell the difference?
As an experience web designer and web developer, I can tell you it’s very misleading.
It can be a minefield for a non-technical person, even if you’re experience with marketing & sales.
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