I’ve looked at a lot of builder and tradie websites. Most of them have the same problem: they were built to look credible, not to generate work.
There’s a photo of a finished job. A list of services. A phone number buried in the footer. And a contact form that nobody trusts because it looks like it hasn’t been checked since 2019.
These sites aren’t bad. They’re just not doing any work.
The conversion gap
A prospective client lands on your site. They’re trying to answer one question: “Is this person credible enough for me to give them a call?” Everything else is noise.
Credibility signals for a builder include: being a registered builder (HIA/VBA number visible), geographic specificity (not “Melbourne and surrounds” but “Toora, Leongatha, Foster”), evidence of specific work (real photos, not stock images), and a clear, frictionless way to take the next step.
The “next step” matters more than most people think. If you make someone figure out how to contact you, many of them won’t. A prominent “Request a Quote” button that captures name, project type, suburb, and rough budget is worth ten generic contact forms.
The ROI calculation
One additional qualified enquiry per month from your website — at an average job value of $80,000 — is $960,000 of opportunity per year. The website isn’t a cost. It’s infrastructure.