WhAT OUR WEBSITES DO

It Markets Itself

Your website writes its own blog posts, posts to your social pages, requests reviews, and emails your customers — every month, automatically.

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Why Local Business Marketing Always Falls Behind — and What Going Quiet Costs You on Google

Every local business owner knows the list: post on Facebook, keep the website fresh, ask happy customers for reviews, send something to the customer list, write the kind of content that makes Google take you seriously. And every owner knows what actually happens to that list — it loses to the day job, every single day. The last Facebook post is from months ago. The website hasn't changed since it went up. The email list (if it exists) has never been emailed. Not because marketing doesn't matter, but because you already have a full-time job, and it's the one that pays.

The cost of that silence is quiet but real, and it compounds. Google's local rankings favor businesses that show signs of life — fresh content, active profiles, a steady flow of recent reviews — so a frozen web presence slowly sinks under competitors who post. Customers do a background check before they call: a Facebook page that went dark in January reads as "are they still in business?" And the customer list is the expensive one: it costs several times more to win a new customer than to bring back a past one, yet past customers forget you the moment the job ends. Silence doesn't hold your place in line. It gives it away.



Automated Small Business Marketing: SEO Blog Posts, Social Media, Reviews, and Email on Autopilot

Your website fixes this by doing the marketing itself. Every month, on schedule, without you touching it: it writes and publishes blog posts targeted at what your customers actually search ("water heater replacement in Katy," "how much does sod installation cost") — the steady drip of content that builds your Google ranking. It turns that content into posts for your Facebook, Instagram, and Google Business Profile, so your pages look alive because they are. After jobs, it automatically asks your customers for reviews, building the star count that new customers check first. And on the Pro plan, it emails your customer list — a monthly newsletter that keeps you remembered, and win-back campaigns that go to customers who haven't booked in a while and reliably pull some of them back onto the calendar.

You approve what goes out with a glance, and once a month you get a plain-English report: what was published, who it reached, what it booked. Marketing stops being the guilt on your to-do list and becomes something your website just… does. Consistently. Which — in local marketing — is the entire secret. Not brilliance. Consistency.

"Effective marketing is not just about reaching people—it's about connecting with them in meaningful ways."

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Automated Marketing vs. Hiring a Marketing Coordinator: Monthly Cost and Hours Saved

Done by hand, this is easily 10–15 hours a month of writing, posting, chasing reviews, and fighting with email tools — which is exactly why it never gets done. Done by hire, a part-time marketing coordinator runs $2,000–$3,000 a month, and a small agency retainer starts around there too, before ad spend. Your website does the whole rhythm — blogs, social, reviews, email — as a built-in feature, every month without being reminded. The hours it returns are the ones you were never going to find anyway; the difference is that now the work happens instead of waiting. You stay the technician. Your website becomes the marketing department that never misses a Monday.

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Your New Website Could Be Live This Week Answering Clients For You