You pour driveways that last 40 years. Your website won't last past the homeowner's first scroll.
Concrete and masonry is one of the most visual trades in existence — stamped patios, paver driveways, stone walls, decorative finishes — and most contractors in it show zero photos. A homeowner deciding between you and two other crews judges the work they can see, and on your site there's nothing to see. We rebuild concrete and masonry sites into photo-led, project-by-project portfolios that close the patio job before anyone walks the yard.
Concrete and masonry should be the easiest trade on earth to sell online, because every job is a photograph. A stamped-and-stained patio at dusk, a herringbone paver driveway, a dry-stack stone retaining wall holding back a hillside — these are images that sell themselves to the homeowner scrolling at night. Yet most concrete contractor websites are a wall of text with a phone number and maybe one cracked, washed-out photo. The customer comparing three crews picks the one whose finished work they can actually see, and a photo-led portfolio organized by project type beats the best pour with no proof every time.
The other leak is quote friction. A homeowner who wants a patio priced has to schedule a stranger to walk the backyard, and plenty of them stall for weeks before they bother. The contractors winning now offer a fast path — submit a few photos and rough dimensions, get a ballpark range back inside a day or two — and the crew that answers first with a real number gets the site visit. Add the residential-versus-commercial split most concrete companies blur together, and the site has real work to do: sort the patio homeowner from the property manager pricing a parking lot, and speak to each one in their own lane.
The four ways concrete websites lose money
We've audited hundreds of concrete contractor sites. The same problems show up over and over — and every one of them costs you a customer who was ready to pay.
A photo-led trade with no photos
Stamped concrete, pavers, stonework, decorative finishes — this is the most photogenic trade in the building, and your site shows a logo and a paragraph. The customer is choosing the work they can see, and you've given them nothing to see.
No way to start a quote without a site visit
A homeowner who wants a patio number has to book a stranger to come stand in the yard, and that friction stalls jobs for weeks. The crew that lets them submit photos and dimensions for a ballpark wins the conversation before the others schedule the walk.
Residential and commercial blurred into one mess
A homeowner pricing a stamped patio and a property manager pricing a 40,000-square-foot pour are different buyers with different language. A site that mashes them together speaks clearly to neither, and loses the bigger commercial lane by default.
No pages for what you actually pour
Driveways, patios, retaining walls, foundations, stamped and decorative, sidewalks, pool decks — all dumped into one 'Concrete Services' line. Google can't rank that, so 'stamped concrete patio near me' goes to whoever gave it a page.
The vibe we'd build for a concrete contractor
Concrete is the most photogenic trade nobody photographs. The vibe: wet-pour slate gray, warm flagstone tan, stamped-and-stained texture shot at dusk — a portfolio-first site where the finished pour does every bit of the selling.
Built for how a concrete contractor actually wins work
A concrete and masonry website wins by showing the finished work and removing the friction between 'I want a patio' and 'they gave me a number.' Everything we build does one or the other.
A portfolio organized by project type
Full-bleed galleries of finished work — stamped patios at dusk, paver driveways, stone walls, decorative finishes — sorted by type and named by neighborhood. The single highest-leverage asset a concrete contractor owns, finally treated like one.
A photo-and-dimensions quote path
Upload a few photos, enter rough square footage, get a written ballpark range back in a day or two. Removes the walk-the-yard friction that stalls jobs and filters the tire-kickers before you roll a truck.
A page per pour
Driveways, patios, retaining walls, foundations, stamped and decorative, sidewalks and pool decks — each its own rankable page with its own gallery and pricing guidance, so you show up for every search instead of one.
A clean commercial lane
A separate path for property managers and GCs — parking lots, ADA work, foundations, references, insurance and bonding — speaking their language, not the homeowner's. The steadiest, biggest-ticket revenue in the trade, usually left on the table by sites built only for patios.
Finishes and options made visible
Color charts, stamp patterns, broom versus exposed-aggregate versus stamped — the decorative choices are half the sale of a patio, and a page that shows the options closes the customer who's still deciding what they even want.
Suburb-by-suburb pages
A page for every community you pour in, each with local project photos, so 'driveway replacement near me' lands on work from three streets over instead of a competitor across the metro.
Old site gone, new site live, in 7 days.
Audit & quote
60-minute call. We tell you exactly what's broken and lock a fixed price before you hang up.
Design + copy + SEO
You watch the real site take shape in the browser. We write the copy and wire the schema.
You review, we polish
One round of revisions, applied the same day. No tickets. No project-manager relay.
Launch — you keep the keys
Your domain, your hosting, your code. No platform lock-in, no retainer, no hostage situation.
Concrete & Masonry websites, built market by market
Everything happens over a call and a shared screen — no office visit, no markup for geography. These are the markets we focus on:
Before you call
I price everything by the square foot after I see the site. Why bother with online quotes?
Because you don't have to quote the job to start the conversation — you just have to give a number that qualifies it. A ballpark range from photos and rough dimensions tells the homeowner whether you're in their budget and tells you whether they're worth a truck roll, before either of you spends an afternoon. The final price still comes after you measure. The crew that answers first with a real range usually gets the walk.
Most of my real money is commercial. Does a website even matter for that?
More than you'd think. GCs and property managers vet concrete subs online before they ever request a bid — they're checking that you handle commercial scope, carry the bonding and insurance, and have the references and finished lots to prove it. A site built only for backyard patios quietly tells them you're a residential outfit and they pass. A clean commercial lane keeps you in the running for the bigger pours.
I've got hundreds of job photos on my phone and none of them are organized. Now what?
Send them over — we sort the chaos. We curate and color-correct what you have into galleries by project type and neighborhood, lead with the dusk patio and stonework shots that actually sell, and quietly drop the washed-out ones. Then we hand your crew a 30-second shot list so every future pour gets photographed like the sales asset it is, and the portfolio keeps building itself.
What does it cost, exactly?
Three fixed packages: $1,500 for a 5-page rebuild with full SEO in 7 days, $3,800 for up to 20 pages with a blog, lead forms and integrations in 14 days, and $8,000 for 100+ page builds with a custom hero video, calculators and lead funnels. The quote we send before you sign is the number on the final invoice — no scope-creep charges, ever.
Ready to bulldoze your concrete contractor's website?
Tell us your domain. We'll send a brutal audit of what's broken, with a fixed quote to fix it. No sales call required.
Got it. Your teardown is on its way to — we reply within 24 hours.