WebDesignforConstructionCompanies
Before a developer, owner, or GC invites you to bid, they look you up. Your website is something that builds trust because it says that you care. We build a website for construction companies that builds trust.
Web design for a construction company means building a prequalification asset, not a lead machine. A sector portfolio, your credentials, and a downloadable capability statement get you past the vetting and onto the bid list, and a real careers page brings in the crews to take on bigger work.
What a construction company's website is actually for
Nobody hires a contractor off a homepage. For a firm your size, the site isn't a lead machine. It's doing two quieter jobs that decide whether the work and the people come to you.
Winning the work
Before a developer, owner, or GC ever picks up the phone, somebody on their end is already looking you up. That's standard now. They're checking who you've worked for, how big a job you can handle, your safety record, your bonding, whether you've done their kind of project before. If your site doesn't show that clearly, you don't get a "no," you just don't make the list, and you never find out why. The bid you lose this way isn't the one you walked away from. It's the one you never even heard about.
Winning the workforce
Established firms are almost always hiring. The bottleneck usually isn't finding work, it's finding skilled people to do it. Good crews have options, and they're looking at the same things a developer would: does this company look stable, does it look like it's going somewhere, is it worth leaving a current job for. A careers page and a site that looks like a firm worth joining brings in the people you need to take on bigger work. Without it, you're losing those hires to a competitor that just looks better online.
What we build
Here's what goes into a site built for how a construction company actually gets vetted, by people and by the people doing the hiring.
A portfolio grouped by the kind of work you do
We group your projects by market and size, commercial, civil, multifamily, industrial, whatever fits, instead of generic before-and-after photos. A developer scanning your site for ten seconds should be able to see you've handled their kind of job at their kind of budget. That's the difference between "looks like a contractor" and "looks like our contractor."
Your capabilities, laid out the way a buyer needs them
We lay out your services, your markets, what you self-perform versus subcontract, and how you deliver a job, in a way someone vetting you can actually use, not just read. That includes a downloadable capability statement built to drop right into a bid file, so they don't have to dig for the basics.
The credentials that get you past the gate
Bonding capacity, licensing, safety record, certifications, the associations you belong to. All of it shown up front instead of buried or missing, so you clear that first check before anyone has to ask.
A careers page that competes for crews
A real careers presence, not an afterthought page: who you are, what you've built, why someone would want to be part of it. This is what lets you take on bigger jobs instead of turning them down for lack of crew.
A site that looks like a firm, not a flyer
Leadership shown by name, past clients named where you can name them, your project history and credentials laid out the way a committee or a developer actually reads them when they're deciding if you're a safe bet. Not flash. Just the proof, laid out clean.
Construction businesses we've built for
These are client sites, not mockups. Worth saying up front: B2B clients in this industry don't tend to leave written reviews, so you won't find quotes here. The work has to speak for itself.
Common questions from construction companies
- We get our work through bids, GCs, and relationships. Does a website even matter?
- It's not going to replace the relationship, and it's not going to win a bid on its own. But before that relationship gets a chance to matter, the other side is already looking you up. The site's job is to get you past that check so the relationship gets the shot it deserves.
- Can you build a capabilities section and case studies for the kind of work we do?
- Yes. We group your portfolio by market and project size instead of generic project photos, and we build a downloadable capability statement you can hand to a buyer or attach right to a bid package.
- Can the site help us hire?
- Yes. We build a careers presence that gives skilled people a reason to want to work for you. For most established firms, that matters more than it gets credit for.
- Can you make us look like a firm that can handle bigger projects?
- Yes, by showing what's already true about you: leadership, project history, credentials, the polish your work deserves. What we won't do is have you claim work you haven't actually done. That catches up with you fast in this industry.
- Do you only build for construction companies?
- No. We build for a range of local service businesses. This particular approach, getting you past the vetting first, is built for B2B construction, not homeowner lead-gen, so the site is shaped around bid invitations and recruiting rather than chasing residential calls.
- What does a construction company website cost?
- Custom sites start at $499, and a construction site usually runs higher because the scope is bigger. Price scales with the size of the job. The pricing page lays out where things land.
For the universal stuff, who you work with, how the process runs, and the fact that you own the site outright, that all lives on the web design page
The next project you want is already sizing you up
Somewhere a developer or owner is deciding who to invite to the table, and they're looking at sites to make the call. Let's make sure yours puts you on the list.
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