FLUXATH · Field Kit

Website
Sales Toolkit

For closing trade owners who earned the reviews — but vanish the second someone Googles them.

The whole pitch, one line: You did the hard part. You're just invisible online — and the competitor with a site is catching your jobs.
00

Who you're calling

Owner-operators of high-ticket local trades — 8+ five-star reviews, no real website (or Facebook-only). The owner answers his own phone. Busy, skeptical of salespeople, proud of his name.

RoofingConcreteLandscapingHVACAuto detailingWrapsPool / RemodelTree service

What you sell: a ~$1,200–2,000 one-time build + optional $99–199/mo care plan. You build fast — the demo is often live before the call ends. Sell the demo, not the idea.

01

Cold-call script

Peer, not vendor. Slow down. You're a local guy who noticed something — not a call center. Lead with their reputation, hit the gap, then shut up.

Open — the gap · first 15 seconds

"Hey, is this [owner name / the owner]? — Hey [name], my name's Kevin, I'll be quick. I'm not selling you leads or ads, promise. I was looking at [trade] guys in [city] and yours stood out — you've got [# of reviews] five-star reviews, more than most shops around there.

Here's why I called: I went to pull up your website to send a buddy your way… and there isn't one. You show on the map, but the second somebody Googles '[trade] in [city]' and wants to look at your work before they call — there's nothing there. They land on the next guy instead.

You already did the hard part — the reputation. You're just losing the people who check you out online first. That's the whole reason I called. Got 30 seconds for me to show you what I mean?"

▸ Then STOP. Let it land. Don't fill the silence.

Discovery — earn the right to pitch

Pitch — short, concrete

"So here's what I do. I build you a clean, fast site — your work, your reviews, a click-to-call button, a 'get a quote' form that texts straight to your phone. Looks like you've been in business 20 years, because you have. People Google you, see the gallery, trust you, call — instead of bouncing to the next guy.

It's a one-time [$1,200–2,000], not a monthly trap. Live in about a week. And honestly — I already started one for you so you can see it, not just imagine it. Want me to text you the link?"

Close — assume the next step

"Tell you what — I'll text you the demo right now while we're on the phone. Look at it tonight, and if it feels right I'll have you live by [day]. Best number — this one?"

Fallback closes

Soft: "No pressure either way — want me to just send the demo and you tell me yes or no after you see it?"
Urgency (real): "I only take a couple builds a week so they're actually good — want me to hold your spot for this week?"
Price-anchor: "One roof / one pool / one remodel covers this for five years. Worst case, you've got a site that makes you look legit. Want me to send it?"
02

Objection handlers

Rule: agree first, then flip. Never argue. Every objection is really "I don't believe it'll pay." Answer with their money, not your features.

Wall"Nah, I'm good."

The flip

"Totally fair — I'm not trying to fix something that's broken, your shop clearly works. The only thing I'd say is: 'good' is exactly why this stings. You've got [#] five-star reviews and a guy down the street with 6 reviews and a website is showing up above you when people search. You did the work; he's getting the click. Let me just send the demo — if it looks like junk, ignore me. Deal?"

Wall"I get all my work word-of-mouth."

The flip

"That's the best kind — means your work's good. But think about what word-of-mouth is now: somebody says 'call [name], they're great,' and the first thing that person does is Google you to check. If nothing comes up, the referral cools off right there. A site doesn't replace word-of-mouth — it catches it. Right now half your referrals leak out the bottom because there's nothing to land on. That's free money you already earned."

Wall"Too expensive / no money right now."

The flip

"I hear you, and I wouldn't pitch you if it didn't pay for itself. What's one [roof / pool / remodel / detail package] worth — [$X]? So one job covers this, and after that it keeps feeding you. It's a one-time [$1,200–2,000], not a subscription. If it helps, I'll split it — half now, half when it's live and you've seen it work. I'm not asking you to gamble."

Wall"I don't have time for this."

The flip

"That's exactly why I built it this way — you don't do anything. I pull your reviews, your photos off your Google page, write all the copy, hand you a finished site. Most I'd need is maybe 10 minutes for a few job photos — and I can mostly pull those myself. You stay on the tools; I handle the screen. Time's the reason to do it, not skip it."

Wall"I had a website before / tried it, didn't work."

The flip

"Yeah — most of those were a $5,000 agency thing nobody updated, or a DIY builder that looked like a template and never showed up on Google. That's not this. This is fast, loads in a second, built to actually rank for '[trade] [city],' reviews and a call button front and center. The old one didn't work because nobody set it up to bring you calls. I do. Let me send the demo — you'll see the difference in 5 seconds."

Wall"Let me think about it / call me back."

The flip

"Of course — and I'd rather you decide on something real than something I described over the phone. No pressure: I'll text you the live demo right now. Sleep on it, look tomorrow with coffee. If it's a no, text me 'no' and you'll never hear from me again. If it's a yes, you're live by [day]. Fair? — Best number for the link?"

Bonus"Just send me some info / email it."

The flip

"Happy to — but a PDF won't show you much. What'll actually sell you is seeing your own site, so let me text you the live demo instead of a brochure. Takes 10 seconds to look. Cool?"

Bonus"Who are you? / Are you local?"

The flip

"Fair question — I'm Kevin, FLUXATH, I build sites for trade guys specifically. Not an agency with 50 clients; I do a handful at a time so they're actually good. I called you because your reviews stood out, not because I'm dialing a list. Want to see the demo and judge me by the work?"

03

Pricing & proposal

One page. Fill the blanks, text it or hand it over. Anchor on jobs won, not features.

Proposal — [Business name]
Trade ______ · City ______ · Date ______
Kevin — FLUXATH
[phone] · [email]
You've got [#] five-star reviews and no website. Here's how we fix that — and start catching the jobs you're currently losing on Google.
What you get — Website build · one-time
  • Custom [3–5] page site — Home, Services, Gallery/Work, Reviews, Contact
  • Mobile-first, loads under 2 seconds (most customers are on a phone)
  • Click-to-call button + "Get a Quote" form that texts straight to you
  • Your Google reviews pulled in and shown front and center
  • Photo gallery of your work (pulled from your Google page; add more anytime)
  • Written for you — every word, every service, your area
  • Google-ready — built to rank for "[trade] in [city]" + Google Business link
  • Domain setup (yourname.com) + SSL — the padlock that says "trust me"
One-time build$__________
Typical $1,200–2,000 · 50% to start, 50% when it's live and you've seen it.
Optional — Care & Hosting · monthly
  • Hosting, security, SSL, backups — stays fast and online
  • Up to [2] content/photo updates a month (new jobs, seasonal offers)
  • Google Business profile kept fresh
  • Monthly check-in: where your calls are coming from
  • Priority text support — something breaks, fixed same day
Monthly care$__________
Typical $99–199/mo · cancel anytime.
The math — their numbers
Your average job$__________
Build cost$__________
Jobs to break evenless than one
Live by__________
Bottom line: one extra job pays for the whole thing. Everything after is profit. Reply "yes" and I start today. — Kevin
04

Why you're losing jobs without a site

Read these when they push back, or leave them as the proof. One trade, five sharp bullets — all about lost jobs, not pretty websites.

Roofing
  • "Roofer near me" is the #1 way people find you now — no site on page one means you're invisible to every storm-damage homeowner who isn't a referral.
  • Insurance-job homeowners vet you hard. A $10–20k claim job? They Google you, find nothing, and call the guy whose site shows licenses, photos, reviews.
  • Storm season is a race. When hail hits, everyone searches at once. No site = you're not in the race, you're watching it.
  • Reviews on Google ≠ reviews on a site you control. A site stacks reviews, before/afters, and warranties in one place that closes the sale.
  • Out-of-town and corporate roofers are eating local markets with slick sites. Your reputation beats theirs — but only if people can find it.
Concrete
  • Concrete is visual and high-ticket. A driveway or stamped patio is $5–25k — buyers want to see your finishes before they call. No gallery, no call.
  • "Show me what you've done" kills you on the phone if your answer is "uh, I can text you some pics." A site closes that before they even dial.
  • Bigger bids go to whoever looks more established. A clean portfolio makes a 2-truck crew look like a 20-year company — and wins premium jobs.
  • Homeowners comparison-shop 3 contractors. The two with websites get taken seriously; the one without gets "we went another direction."
  • Your best work is trapped on your phone. A site turns finished jobs into your hardest-working salesman, 24/7, while you're pouring.
Landscaping
  • A $15k backyard sells with photos, not a quote. Without a gallery site you're describing a transformation people need to see to pay for.
  • Design & install clients research first. They scroll a portfolio, fall in love with a look, then call. No portfolio = not in their consideration set.
  • Recurring maintenance contracts start online. People search "landscaping company [city]," pick who looks legit, lock in a season. Miss the search, miss the contract.
  • Facebook-only buries you. Younger homeowners — your highest-budget clients — Google and book online; they're not scrolling your Facebook.
  • Seasonal spikes pass you by. Spring/fall rush, everyone searches at once — a site catches the wave; word-of-mouth alone can't scale to it.
HVAC
  • AC dies → people Google "AC repair near me" right now — emergency, ready to pay. No site, no call, and that's a same-day ticket gone.
  • System replacements are $5–12k decisions. Homeowners vet you online before spending that — financing, reviews, brands. No site reads as "too small to trust."
  • Maintenance plans are recurring revenue you're leaving behind — easiest place to sign one is a website "book a tune-up" button.
  • Franchise HVAC outspends you on ads and sites. Your 4.8★ / 172-review reputation crushes theirs — but only where customers can see it.
  • After-hours calls go to whoever's findable at 9pm. A site with click-to-call catches the panic search you'll never get by referral.
Auto detailing
  • An image business with an image problem: no site, and you look like a side-hustle instead of a real shop people trust with a $300+ ceramic coat.
  • Your customers are young and phone-first. They Google, look at before/afters, book online — Facebook-only means they never even see you.
  • Booking friction kills jobs. "DM me on Facebook" loses the customer who wanted to book at 11pm; a site with online booking catches them.
  • Premium services (ceramic, PPF, paint correction) sell on visuals. No gallery = stuck quoting basic washes instead of high-margin packages.
  • A site lets you charge more. Looking professional online is the gap between "$80 detail guy" and "the shop that does my $1,500 coating" — same hands, different price.