The $3,500 build, for concrete leveling and coatings businesses
The Repair Most Homeowners Do Not Know Exists
We build concrete lifting companies a custom website: 40+ pages that show homeowners why raising a slab often beats replacing it, with chat, appointment booking, reviews, and instant callback wired in. It costs $3,500 one time, and you own everything after handover: the design, the pages, the domain, with no subscription required.
One-time payment · no subscription required · you own everything at launch
A sunken slab you don't explain is often a job someone else quotes
Your next customer is standing on a driveway that dropped two inches at the garage line, and they assume the whole thing has to be torn out. So they search "sunken driveway repair" or ask ChatGPT whether a sinking slab can be saved. Google and the AI assistants answer with whichever local companies published pages those engines can actually read and cite. Nobody can buy that answer, but you can be missing from it, and most leveling companies are.
Most concrete lifting sites are five pages that say mudjacking, polyjacking, free estimates, and stop there. They never answer what homeowners actually type: mudjacking vs polyjacking, concrete leveling cost, can foam raise a garage slab, is my sidewalk fixable. So the homeowner never learns that lifting commonly costs a fraction of replacement, calls a tear-out contractor instead, and you lose a one-visit job you would likely have closed.
Then there is the citation caller. A city inspector tags the sidewalk as a trip hazard, or the HOA letter arrives with a 30-day deadline, and that homeowner is searching "sidewalk trip hazard fix" the same evening with a fine hanging over them. They tend to call the first company whose site explains the repair and responds fast. If that site is not yours, the deadline job goes elsewhere, and the neighbor's citation work often follows it.
What your 40+ pages would be
Service pages for every way you fix concrete
One deep page each for concrete leveling, polyjacking, mudjacking, void filling, caulking and joint sealing, and garage floor coatings in epoxy and polyaspartic. Each explains the method, what it fixes, and how long it commonly takes, so the homeowner arrives already understanding the work.
Town pages for every city you lift in
A page for each town and suburb on your route, written around its housing stock and soil: clay that heaves, fill settling under 1990s subdivisions, tree roots tenting older sidewalks. When someone nearby searches for slab repair, there is a page that speaks to their street, not a generic city list.
Cost and question pages that do the educating
Pages answering exactly what your buyers ask: what does concrete leveling cost, mudjacking vs polyjacking, how long does poly foam last, can a sunken pool deck be raised, epoxy vs polyaspartic for a garage floor. With lifting vs replacement photos, because the company that explains it first often earns the call.
Trigger pages for the deadline moments
Dedicated pages for the moments that force a call: a city sidewalk citation with a compliance date, an HOA violation letter, a home inspection that flagged a trip hazard before closing, water pooling against the foundation. These callers need a fix by a date, and the page says you handle exactly that.
Proof pages built on before-and-after lifts
Galleries of real lifts with the measurements: the corner that sat two inches low, the slab back at grade an hour later. Plus your reviews, warranty terms, licensing and insurance. Concrete leveling is a visual trade, and homeowners believe a raised-slab photo faster than any paragraph of promises.
The pages teach. The capture layer picks up.
Instant callback matters most in this trade because of who is calling. The citation caller has a deadline and a fine attached, so they often open three sites and go with whoever responds first. Instant callback rings your phone while they are still reading your trip hazard page, and in a trade where quotes are fast and installs are often same-week, being first on the phone is most of the sale.
The rest of the layer works the education angle. Chat answers "is my driveway fixable" and "mudjacking or polyjacking" at 9pm and can turn that answer into a booked estimate on your calendar, no phone tag. And the reviews engine keeps asking finished customers for Google reviews with photos, building the before-and-after library that a visual trade like yours sells on.
The Math on a $3,500 Build
The math is short. If your average job commonly lands around $1,800, a lifted driveway, a leveled pool deck, a coated garage floor, then the $3,500 build is covered after two jobs. Everything from job three onward comes from an asset you own outright. And because leveling quotes are fast and installs are quick, the distance between a website inquiry and paid work is shorter here than in most trades.
Compare that with ads, where every click is rented and the calls stop the day the spending does. Pages you own keep answering "concrete leveling cost" at midnight, year after year, with no meter running. One honest caveat: new pages typically need two to four months to earn their place in search results. This is a build for owners planning next season, not a switch that flips overnight.
Straight answers.
Why is this $3,500 when agencies have quoted me $8,000 or more, or $500 a month forever?
Because we productized the build. Most agencies design each site from scratch and bill the hours, or park you on a template and charge monthly rent for it. We have already built the concrete leveling playbook: the 40+ page structure, the mudjacking vs polyjacking explainers, the citation and trip hazard pages. Your towns, photos, pricing approach, and voice are what get customized. That is why the price is flat and one-time, and why no subscription is attached to keep the site alive.
I already have a website and my domain has been around for years. Do I have to start over?
No, and you should not. A domain with years of Google history is an asset, so we build on it instead of starting beside it. We keep your domain, carry over any page already earning traffic for terms like mudjacking or your town name, redirect your old pages so nothing is lost, and add the 40+ pages a leveling site needs: the cost explainers, the trip hazard and citation pages, the before-and-after lift galleries. If your current site is a solid few pages, that just makes the build faster. If it is a five-page we-do-mudjacking-free-estimates brochure from 2016, the new build replaces it at the same address.
Do I need your monthly plan for the site to keep working?
No. The $3,500 build stands on its own: the site, the pages, and the chat, booking, reviews, and callback tools all keep running after handover, and you own the whole thing, hosting and domain included. The monthly plan exists for owners who want us to keep publishing new town pages and cost explainers (concrete leveling cost, mudjacking vs polyjacking, epoxy vs polyaspartic for a garage floor) and to manage their Google Business Profile, but it is optional. Plenty of owners take the finished site and run it themselves, and nothing shuts off if you do.
Most homeowners around here have never heard of concrete leveling. Can a website sell a service nobody searches for?
They do not search for the service, they search the symptom, and the site is built around exactly that. People type sunken driveway repair, sidewalk trip hazard fix, cracked garage floor, uneven patio, and those searches happen every week in your towns. The pages meet the symptom, then teach the fix: photos of a lift in progress, the cost difference versus tear-out, the one-hour timeline. The education gap is not your problem, it is your opening, because the company that explains it first is the one homeowners tend to trust with the quote.
One build. Yours forever.
Custom design for your concrete leveling and coatings 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