
A Stunning Portfolio Website for DeCloud’s Finish Touch
DeCloud’s Finish Touch came to us with an extraordinary archive of ornate finish carpentry spanning some of Branson’s most iconic resorts—Nantucket, Big Cedar, and more.

DeCloud’s Finish Touch came to us with an extraordinary archive of ornate finish carpentry spanning some of Branson’s most iconic resorts—Nantucket, Big Cedar, and more.

Jilly Goat Coffee had a dream she’d been nurturing for years, and this was finally the season she decided to bring it to life.

Silver Mountain Metals is run by a retired couple who spent decades collecting precious gemstones before finally learning the art of metal casting.

White Pine Roofing in Hayden, ID has become one of our favorite ongoing partnerships. As a division of White Pine Construction, they had the vision
If you serve multiple cities or service areas, you’ve probably noticed something frustrating:
People don’t always realize you serve their location.
Even when they find your website, they may hesitate because:
your city isn’t mentioned clearly
the page feels generic
it doesn’t feel local to them
they aren’t sure if calling makes sense
A location landing page fixes this by creating a clear, focused experience for each city or service area you serve — without rebuilding your entire website.
When someone lands on the page, they immediately know:
“Yes — this business serves my area.”
Most customers don’t search broadly.
They search with location in mind.
They’re asking:
Who serves my city?
Is this business familiar with my area?
Do I need to keep searching?
If your website doesn’t clearly answer those questions, they move on — even if your services are exactly what they need.
A location landing page removes that doubt instantly.
Business owners usually invest in location landing pages because they want to:
A good location page creates relevance — not repetition.
Most location pages fail because they’re treated as an afterthought.
Common issues include:
thin or duplicated content
pages that feel copy-pasted
no real connection to the location
unclear calls to action
pages built for search engines but not people
These pages may exist — but they don’t convert.
A strong location landing page quietly does several important things:
The goal is confidence, not persuasion.
Most high-performing location landing pages include:
Each page stands on its own — without feeling disconnected from your brand.
Location landing pages don’t replace your core site — they support it.
They work best when:
your main services are already defined
each page focuses on one area
pages are organized cleanly
visitors can move naturally from local context to action
This creates a strong bridge between visibility and conversion.
Once location pages are in place, many businesses pair them with AI SEO so each page appears when people search in that specific area.
This works especially well when:
search intent is local
services are clearly aligned
visitors land on a page that matches their search exactly
The result is fewer bounces and more qualified inquiries.
This approach is a strong fit if:
you serve multiple cities or regions
customers aren’t sure if you cover their area
you want more local leads without cluttering your site
your current service area page feels too broad
you’re expanding into new areas
If people are already searching for you locally, location landing pages help them choose you faster.
Every business serves locations differently.
Tell us:
which cities or areas you want to target
what services matter most in each area
what isn’t working with your current setup
where you want to grow next
From there, we’ll recommend a clear next step — not a generic solution.
A general service area page tries to cover everything at once. A location landing page focuses on one specific city or area, making the content feel relevant and intentional. This helps visitors feel confident they’re in the right place and helps search engines understand where your business belongs.
Not when they’re structured correctly. Each location landing page is built around a distinct area and intent, which helps avoid overlap. This allows businesses serving places like Coeur d’Alene, Post Falls, Spokane, and surrounding cities to gain visibility without their pages competing against one another.
No. Location landing pages are ideal for service-based businesses that travel to customers. As long as you legitimately serve the area, the page can be structured to reflect that clearly and honestly — without misleading visitors or search engines.