The $3,500 build, for concrete businesses
Built for the Homeowner Comparing Three Concrete Bids
One custom build: 40-plus pages covering driveways, stamped patios, sidewalks, and garage slabs across every town you pour in, with project galleries, chat, estimate booking, a reviews engine, and instant callback wired in. You pay $3,500 once and own all of it outright, the design, the pages, and the domain, with no subscription required.
One-time payment · no subscription required · you own everything at launch
The Shortlist Forms Before the First Call
A homeowner planning a new driveway does not open the phone book. They type concrete driveway cost into Google, or ask ChatGPT to name a concrete contractor near them, then start a shortlist from what comes back. Nobody can buy those AI recommendations. The engines read whatever pages exist, and if yours is a faded one-pager or nothing at all, there is nothing for them to pull your name from.
Think about what a homeowner wants to know before they call three companies for bids. What a stamped concrete patio commonly costs. How thick a driveway slab should be poured. How many days before they can park on it. Whether you do exposed aggregate or a broom finish. A site that is a logo, one truck photo, and a number answers none of it, so they keep scrolling to a contractor who does.
Concrete is visual, planned, and quote-shopped: homeowners collect three estimates and study finished work before anyone signs. The contractor whose site shows real driveways, patios, and slabs, and explains how pricing is figured, tends to arrive at the estimate already half-trusted. The one with no photos and no pricing context is far more likely to be the throwaway third bid.
What your 40+ pages would be
Service pages for every finish you pour
One deep page each for concrete driveways, stamped and decorative concrete, patios, sidewalks and walkways, garage and shed slabs, footings and foundation walls, and tear-out and replacement. Each is written around what that buyer is searching and shows the finishes you pour, so the stamped patio page and the driveway page each draw their own homeowner.
A page for every town you pour in
You pour across a whole metro, but searches happen town by town: a driveway quote in one suburb, a patio in the next. We build a page for each community you serve, written around its housing, so a homeowner searching their own town's name is far more likely to find a contractor who names it back instead of a company thirty minutes away.
Cost and question pages that pre-frame the bid
Pages that answer what homeowners ask before they request a bid: what a concrete driveway commonly costs, what a stamped concrete patio runs, how thick a driveway should be, how long before you can drive on fresh concrete, and what sidewalk replacement typically involves. These pages pre-frame your number so the estimate lands as fair, not high.
Trigger pages for the projects that start a call
Pages for the moments that start a concrete project: a driveway cracking and spalling past patching, a city notice to replace a hazardous sidewalk square, a slab needed before the shed or garage goes up, and pours homeowners want finished before winter. Each one speaks to that deadline and says you handle exactly that job.
Proof pages built on finished-work photos
Project galleries sorted by job type, driveways, stamped patios, walkways, and slabs, because homeowners buy concrete with their eyes. Plus your Google reviews pulled into pages people read, your license and insurance, your warranty on flatwork, and finish samples. In a bid-comparison trade, the photos and proof do the convincing before the estimate.
The Pages Draw Them. The Capture Layer Holds Them.
The call pattern here is a homeowner shopping bids, usually in the evening, with two or three contractors open in other tabs. Instant callback matters because of that: when they drop their number on your stamped patio page, the system rings your phone while they are still looking at your work, and being the contractor who calls back first, before the other two, is a real edge on a job that is days of planning away.
The rest of the layer fits how concrete gets sold. Estimate booking lets a homeowner put a driveway or patio walkthrough on your calendar at 9pm with no phone tag. Chat answers questions like how thick will it be and can you stamp it, even while you are out on a pour. And the reviews engine texts every finished customer for a Google review with a photo, quietly building the before-and-after gallery a visual, quote-shopped trade sells on.
The Math on a $3,500 Build
Run the numbers yourself. A new concrete driveway commonly runs around $6,000, and patios and slabs commonly land in the four figures. If one driveway you pour comes from a page on this site, the entire $3,500 build is covered by that single job, with room to spare. Each driveway, patio, and slab after that is work off an asset you own outright, not a bill you keep paying.
Compare that with ads. A dollar spent on Google Ads buys clicks until the budget is gone, and then the phone goes quiet that same day. Pages you own work differently: a page explaining what a stamped patio costs keeps drawing homeowners season after season with no meter running. One honest caveat on timing: fresh pages usually take two to four months before search engines trust them enough to rank, so this is the build you make before spring, not mid-season.
Straight answers.
Why is this $3,500 when the agencies calling me want $9,000 or $400 a month forever?
Because we productized the build. Most agencies design each concrete site from scratch and bill the hours, or drop you on a template and charge monthly rent to keep it online. We already built the concrete contractor playbook: the 40-plus page structure, the driveway and stamped patio cost explainers, the job-type galleries, the sidewalk and slab pages. What gets customized is your towns, your finished-work photos, how you price, and your voice. That is how a custom site lands at $3,500 flat, one time, with no subscription holding it hostage.
I already have a website and my domain has been up for years. Do I have to start over?
No, and you should not. A domain with years of Google history behind it is an asset, so we build on it instead of starting a new one beside it. We keep your domain, carry over any page already earning traffic for terms like your town name or stamped concrete, redirect the old pages so nothing drops, and add the 40-plus pages a concrete site needs: the driveway and patio cost pages, the sidewalk replacement pages, and the galleries by job type. If your current site is a solid few pages, that only makes the build faster. If it is a 2015 brochure, the new build replaces it at the same address.
How long before this starts doing anything for my concrete business?
Straight answer: the site is typically live within a few weeks, but fresh pages usually take two to four months to gain traction in search results, and competitive suburbs can run longer. Anyone promising a concrete contractor a booked spring by next week is selling something. The pattern we tend to see: town pages and cost pages, like concrete driveway cost or stamped patio cost, pick up steady visitors first, because almost no contractor in this trade bothers to answer those questions in plain writing.
Do I need a monthly plan for this to keep working?
No. The $3,500 build stands on its own: the pages, the project galleries, the chat, estimate booking, instant callback, and the reviews engine all keep running after handover, and you own the whole thing, hosting and domain included. The monthly plan is for owners who want us to keep adding town pages and finish galleries through the season, publish new cost pages as prices move, and manage their Google Business Profile, but it is optional. Plenty of concrete contractors take the finished site and run it themselves between pours, and nothing shuts off if they do.
One build. Yours forever.
Custom design for your concrete business, 40+ pages built for how your customers search, and the infrastructure to catch every call.
One-time payment · kickoff this week · launched in about four weeks