Web design for restaurants.

Tourists decide where to eat from a beach chair — 8.4 million of them visited Alabama's beaches in 2025 alone.

01

Tourist traffic searches 'where to eat' from a beach chair — restaurants invisible in maps and AI recommendations never enter the decision.

02

Third-party delivery and reservation platforms tax every order while owning the customer relationship the restaurant should own.

03

Menus, hours, and seasonal changes go stale across a dozen listing sites faster than anyone on staff can update them.

04

Review volume and recency drive walk-ins more than any ad spend, but most operators have no system for generating either.

The build,
piece by piece.

Visitor-search visibility

"Where to eat" searches from visitors decide restaurant traffic on this coast. Schema-correct menus, hours, and location data make the restaurant legible to Google Maps and AI recommendations alike.

Own-channel architecture

Third-party platforms tax every order while owning the customer relationship. A fast site with direct menu, hours, and reservation paths keeps the relationship — and the margin.

Always-current listings

Menus and seasonal hours go stale across listing sites faster than staff can chase them. One structured source of truth, syndicated correctly, ends the whack-a-mole.

Review-velocity system

Review volume and recency drive walk-ins more than ad spend. QR-card workflows and an operated GBP build both, on cadence.

Straight answer: CDS has not yet shipped a restaurant site. The GBP operations, review systems, and structured-data work above are running for service businesses in the same tourist markets — the mechanics of being found are the same.

See what has shipped →

Alabama's beaches (Gulf Shores / Orange Beach, Baldwin County) set a tourism record in 2025: $923 million spent on lodging rentals — up from the $871 million record of 2024 — with 8.4 million visitors and $1.42 billion in retail spending. Gulf Shores & Orange Beach Tourism, 2026 Alabama Beaches Tourism Summit (March 2026), via Gulf Coast Media (as of 2026-03)

Baldwin County (the Daphne-Fairhope-Foley MSA) is the 6th fastest-growing metro area in the United States. US Census Bureau population estimates, via Gulf Coast Media (March 2026) (as of 2026-03-26)

Baldwin County's population reached 267,761 on July 1, 2025 — up 6,109 in one year, a 2.3%/yr growth rate nearly four times the Alabama state average, on pace to crack 300,000 by the 2030 census. US Census Bureau Vintage 2025 estimates (released 2026-03-26), via FOX10 News (as of 2026-03-26)

The city pages below carry the sourced market data — population, incomes, housing stock — behind each recommendation:

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and the markets you serve.

Builds from $6,000 · Care plans from $1,500/mo · Fixed numbers in writing

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