One segment. Three sendable angles.
This is still speculative segment proof, not a claimed client case study. The point is to compare how the same business type reads when the proof and CTA emphasis change.
Suppliers who already get traffic or referrals and want the site to improve enquiry quality instead of just existing as a brochure.
Less brand-heavy than the systems version. Better for contact flow than for broad market positioning.
Use this when the pitch is 'we can make your website qualify better RFQs instead of just waiting for calls.'
The segment architecture stays recognizable.
These directions are not random redesigns. They sit on the same segment logic, then change the emphasis at the hero, proof, and CTA layers.
Open with a matrix buyers can actually use.
Instead of a cinematic opener, this direction starts with the information the buying team is already looking for: tolerances, materials, batch sizes, and process types.
- Matrix for materials, tolerances, and series sizes
- Service-line drilldowns with downloadable spec sheets
- Sector relevance framed by parts, not slogans
Put audit posture and process discipline on the table early.
A manufacturing website earns trust when the Q-system is visible. This is where certifications, inspection process, and delivery logic do the heavy lifting.
- Certification strip near the hero
- Inspection and QA process summary
- Reference logic that works even when many projects are under NDA
Make the next step feel operational, not generic.
The bottom of the page should not just say 'contact us'. It should tell the buyer what files to send, who reviews them, and how quickly a serious answer comes back.
- RFQ-specific form fields and upload hints
- Direct contact for technical clarification
- Location and logistics context for DACH buyers
What still has to hold across every version.
Capabilities matrix above the fold — Maschinenbau buyers want specs before story.
Certifications strip near the hero. Industry buyers scan for ISO / DIN / DGQ marks first.
Downloadable PDF spec sheets per service line. Procurement archives them.
Structured service pages, certifications, references, and RFQ funnel with German-first copy discipline.
Broader product taxonomy, multilingual content, downloadable documents, and deeper trust infrastructure.
Spec-sheet refreshes, case additions, hiring pages, SEO cleanup, and quarterly content passes.
Want this version tuned to a real business?
This is one of the strongest DACH outbound surfaces because a prospect can see immediately that the studio understands engineering buyers, not just design fashion.
Compare the other two directions.
Use these when the segment is right but the current hero posture or proof emphasis is not the strongest fit for the prospect.
The strongest trust-heavy variant. It front-loads certifications, QA posture, and production discipline so procurement or technical buyers do not have to hunt for reassurance.
The most rounded B2B version. It organizes the supplier like a systems partner: what they do, for whom, with which process depth, and in which project context.
Other top verticals.
Keep the cross-vertical compare surface close by. The right move is not always to send the most polished page, but the one that matches the buyer motion cleanest.
Local restaurant demo
Launch-site brief
Fitness studio demo
Trial-class brief
Law firm demo
Consultation brief
B2B SaaS demo
Pricing / trial brief
TGA / building systems engineering demo
Planning or tender brief
Real estate / immobilien demo
Viewing / seller brief
Boutique hotel / hospitality demo
Direct-booking brief
Healthcare / clinic demo
Appointment / clinic brief
Physio practice audit demo
Appointment-routing brief