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LANDSCAPING / WEB DESIGN

Web Design for Landscaping Companies

A weekly mowing customer and a $40,000 hardscape customer are shopping for different companies. Your site has to be both. Flat monthly fee.

Web design for a landscaping company means a site where the transformations do the talking and the services stay legible: before-and-after project galleries, maintenance, design, and hardscaping each on their own page because they are bought by different customers, seasonal sections that stay relevant across the year, and quote forms that capture property size and project type up front. Built, hosted, and maintained on a flat monthly fee, backed by The 7-Day Launch Guarantee.

Landscaping sells a picture. No trade benefits more from a homeowner seeing the finished result, and none suffers more from a site that buries its best work in a slideshow header. At the same time, the trade spans everything from weekly mowing to five-figure outdoor construction, and those customers do not shop alike. The build handles both truths at once.

Transformations, given room to work

The galleries lead with full transformations, the before next to the after, organized by project type so a prospect planning a patio finds patios and a prospect drowning in an overgrown yard finds rescues. That pairing is the most persuasive asset a landscaping company owns, and the site is structured so it gets seen early instead of discovered by accident.

Three businesses, three pages

Maintenance, design, and hardscaping each get a dedicated page, because each is its own search and its own buyer. The recurring-service customer sees how to start and what a visit covers; the design customer gets ideas and process; the hardscape customer gets the substance a major project decision needs. Quote forms capture property size and project type up front, so inquiries arrive sorted instead of as a pile of identical messages. Seasonal sections shift the site's emphasis through the year without ever hiding the services that are out of season.

The honest version

A website does not mow anything, and inquiry volume follows your market and the season, so we make no volume promises. What we put up is a fast, mobile-first site where your transformations are presented properly and your three kinds of customer each find their path, live within 7 days of completed onboarding under The 7-Day Launch Guarantee, hosted and maintained on a flat monthly fee. The full service breakdown is on the web design service page.

Related pages

Want a site that sells the transformation?

Get in touch and we will walk you through the plans. The pricing page shows exactly what each plan includes.

Get started

Your site is live within 7 days of completed onboarding (Kickoff Call done, setup fee paid, intake and photos submitted; we do the technical work with you on a call or through email) or your first month after launch is free.

Common questions

Why split maintenance, design, and hardscaping onto separate pages?

Because they are three different purchases made by three different mindsets. The maintenance customer wants reliability and a simple way to start service; the design customer is browsing ideas; the hardscape customer is evaluating a major project. One page trying to serve all three serves none, and Google has the same problem matching it to any specific search.

What do the quote forms ask, and why?

Property size, project type, and rough timeline. A quarter-acre mowing inquiry and a full backyard redesign should not land in your inbox looking identical, and a form that sorts them up front saves the phone tag. It also sets expectations for the customer, which makes the first conversation start further along.

My best photos are seasonal. Does the site go stale in winter?

Not if it is built for the cycle. The site carries seasonal sections that shift emphasis through the year, spring cleanups, summer maintenance, fall planting and leaf work, winter prep and hardscape planning, and the galleries are organized so strong summer transformations keep selling in January, when homeowners are planning rather than planting.