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.
Teams whose strongest differentiator is interdisciplinary depth, systems thinking, or technically complex coordination work.
A little denser than the tender-fit version. Better for technical respect than for the fastest skim-read.
Use this when the pitch is 'the site should show that the firm thinks in systems, not just service labels.'
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.
Start with systems, not abstract positioning.
The page should tell a planning lead within seconds whether the firm is relevant. Gewerke, project phases, and operating context beat broad claims about innovation.
- Visible LPH and project-type scope
- Sector framing by building classes and operator needs
- Immediate route into the right inquiry path
Use matrices and reference logic to show coordination depth.
TGA trust comes from seeing how the team thinks about scope. That means discipline breakdowns, planning-process context, and references that show complexity rather than aesthetics.
- Gewerk matrix with planning and execution context
- Project cards with m2, systems, and coordination depth
- Software stack and BIM/CAD posture as trust infrastructure
Close with structured contact, not a blank textarea.
A strong TGA site helps the next conversation start cleanly. The inquiry area should capture stage, asset type, and key documents before a single phone call happens.
- Split between planning, tender, and retrofit inquiries
- Expected inputs: plans, stage, building type, timeline
- Direct technical contact for serious project leads
What still has to hold across every version.
Leistungsfelder and project phases must be scannable immediately — buyers think in Gewerke, assets, and LPH stages.
Reference projects need complexity signals: building type, square meters, systems, BIM/CAD stack, and delivery model.
The inquiry path should separate planning, tenders, and retrofit or service follow-up so the right context arrives first.
Homepage, Leistungsfelder, references, process, team, and structured inquiry flow.
Adds richer reference system, multilingual posture, downloadable documents, and stronger coordination proof.
Reference additions, tender landing pages, hiring updates, and ongoing content or SEO upkeep.
Want this version tuned to a real business?
TGA is worth building early even without a legacy public demo because it matches the DACH B2B motion and proves we can handle technical, coordination-heavy buyers beyond manufacturing.
Vertical added as a first-wave GTM priority for DACH outreach. This is a concept demo, not a claim about a named client or built project.
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 most commercial and procurement-facing TGA variant. It helps the site answer the question 'are these the right people for this project stage?' quickly.
The most accessible TGA variant. It is especially strong when the firm works on retrofits, modernization, or mixed building contexts where clarity beats grand positioning.
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
Maschinenbau B2B demo
RFQ brief
Law firm demo
Consultation brief
B2B SaaS demo
Pricing / trial 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