Opening a shop is only half of opening a business. The other half is invisible: when someone in your town searches for what you do, something has to come back. When they want a price, there has to be a way to ask that doesn't feel like work. When they've had a good experience, there has to be a path from "that was great" to a review their neighbours will read.

None of that exists by default. That's what a launch package is for.

What we built

The website came first — but not the kind of website most small businesses end up with. No page builder, no plugins to update, no monthly platform fee. A hand-built site that loads in under a second on a phone, because the person searching for a local service is on a phone, probably on the street, halfway through their day.

Every design decision followed from one question: what gets this person to a phone call or a WhatsApp message with the least friction?

The Details That Do the Work

Instant quote toolPick what you need, tap once — WhatsApp opens with the enquiry already written. Wondering to enquiring in fifteen seconds, no typing.
"Open now" badgeLive opening status computed from real hours — no guessing, no wasted trips
Call & WhatsApp barPinned to the bottom of every page on mobile
Spam-filtered contact formTwo layers of protection — what reaches the inbox is real customers
Honest pricingReal guide prices only. Nothing invented, nothing padded
SpeedStatic pages, images ~85% lighter than standard — sub-second loads on mobile data

One rule ran through everything: real content only. No stock testimonials, no invented "trusted by hundreds" claims, no stat that can't be backed up. The reviews section of the site literally stays a modest trust strip until genuine Google reviews exist — then it upgrades itself. A small business's credibility is too valuable to spend on borrowed claims.

The test nobody plans for

Two days after launch, the owner changed her mind about the brand. Not a tweak — a complete change of colours and a new logo she'd designed herself.

This is the moment most small-business websites die a little. The original developer is gone, or the theme fights back, or the quote for changes costs more than the site did. The brand ends up half-changed: new logo on Facebook, old colours on the website, mismatched cards on the counter.

Because the site was built on a proper system — every colour defined once, every asset generated from source — the entire rebrand shipped the same day: website, social images, Google Business Profile graphics, and print-ready review cards, all in the new brand before the old one had a chance to linger anywhere.

I'll be honest: I advised against parts of the new direction, explained the trade-offs, and built exactly what she chose. Her business, her brand, her call. The job is to make the choice informed and then make it real — not to win the argument.

The launch package around the site

A website nobody finds is a brochure in a drawer. The rest of the package is what puts the business where people actually look:

What Launched Alongside the Website

Google Business ProfileVerified, branded, on Google Maps and local search
Facebook pageBranded, with a bank of starter posts written and ready
Review systemGoogle review link, printed QR cards for the counter, ask-messages ready to send, a simple monthly habit
Search foundationStructured data, sitemap, Search Console — the plumbing Google expects
Owner's launch packPlain-English handover: the five things to actually do, what's set up, every link in one place
30-day check-inEnquiries, reviews, traffic — reviewed together, no charge

Where it sits now

The shop is open. The site is live and taking enquiries. The review cards are at the printer. It's deliberately too early for a traffic graph — the 30-day check-in will tell that story with real numbers, not launch-week noise.

What the Owner Got

Found on GoogleMaps, local search, and a site built to rank for her town
Frictionless enquiriesQuote tool → WhatsApp in fifteen seconds, plus call, form and Facebook
A review engineLink, QR cards, ask-scripts — ready before the first customer walked in
A brand that matches everywhereSite, Google, Facebook, print — changed once, changed everywhere
Nothing to maintainNo plugins, no platform fees, no updates to break — send a message and it's changed

The point of this

Most small businesses buy a website when what they need is a launch. The website is one part of a system: be findable, make enquiring effortless, collect proof, keep everything matching. Any part missing, and the others work half as hard.

And the quiet lesson from the rebrand: how something is built matters most on the day plans change. Plans always change.