Web design for water treatment.

Nobody wakes up wanting a water system — demand starts as a problem search, and the company whose content answers it owns the lead.

01

Nobody wakes up wanting a water system — demand starts as a problem search ('why does my water smell'), and the company whose content answers it owns the lead.

02

Big-box dealers and national franchises outspend local operators on ads; organic local rankings are the counterweight.

03

Long consideration cycles mean the first educational touch usually decides the eventual install.

04

Well-water vs. municipal-water needs differ street by street — one generic page can't speak to both.

The build,
piece by piece.

Problem-search content engine

"Why does my water smell" is where the funnel starts. An MDX blog engine on a weekday drip answers the problem searches months before the buyer knows they're a buyer.

Well vs. municipal architecture

Needs differ street by street. Separate page tracks for well-water and municipal-water households speak to each — one generic page speaks to neither.

City × service matrix

Filtration, softening, and testing pages per city — the same programmatic architecture currently being built for WaterFiltration1 under a 24-month engagement.

Long-cycle lead nurture

Consideration cycles are long; the first educational touch usually decides the install. Owner-direct lead capture plus content depth keeps the company in the conversation from first search to signed quote.

Not a pitch deck —
a portfolio.

Water Treatment
WaterFiltration1

Active platform build under a 24-month engagement — full site, local service-area architecture, and blog scaffold in progress for a Gulf Coast water-filtration company.

CDS client portfolio · verified 2026-07-01

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:

Send the business name
and the markets you serve.

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

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