What website a freelance handyman actually needs: the minimum that sells
Met up again with "my Spanish handyman." He invited me to a business meeting at a fancy little café — all very grown-up. Sat down across from me and got straight to it: tell me exactly what kind of website would work for me.
He says: I've got a queue of clients, plenty of work. Why would I even need a site, and what kind?
A fair question. And honestly, this is where I should have said no.
Why I usually turn these clients down
Sounds snobbish, but there's simple business logic behind it.
A do-it-all-with-my-hands master usually lives perfectly fine without a website. Word of mouth, a couple of listings — and the schedule is full. And if clients come anyway, there's no point in sinking money into an expensive professional site.
I build expensive, and for businesses. Which means we'd both waste time: he wastes money, I waste effort on a project he doesn't really need.
So I usually say "no" right at the start.
But Sirio won me over
He says: my client queue runs through September. That's great. But every single day I think about how to grow my business, how to scale.
And that was it. A man with a full schedule who, by all logic, needs nothing — thinks about growth every single day. Not about closing current orders, but about what comes next.
Pretty great mindset, right? With that kind of thinking, I want to work differently too.
What I suggested
An expensive multi-page site here is money down the drain. A freelance builder needs a minimal but working structure:
- a hook of a cover
- portfolio
- reviews
- video intro
- contacts
That's it. No CMS, no extra sections. A one-pager that does one job — turns a visitor into a lead.
The touches that let him charge more
On top of that, I added what tradesmen usually don't show on their sites: square footage of completed jobs, timelines, and a ballpark estimate.
And a dark theme. Not for looks. The "premium" visual helps the client slowly raise his prices — which is exactly what Sirio wants.
The site stops being a mere showcase and becomes a positioning tool.
Why it's now fast — and cheap
Thanks to AI, I send a website draft in 10 minutes. The client sees a result almost instantly, instead of a week of back-and-forth.
It changes the whole economics of the process: sales speed up, and the cost of building a site goes down.
Bottom line: when a master needs a site
If you run a service business, you work with your hands, and you want to grow in price — you need a site. Not an expensive one, but the right one. The minimum that sells.
Cheap labor sells itself in DMs. Expensive labor sells itself on a website.
This is exactly what I do: I build sites for tradesmen and small businesses — fast, with AI, and with the touches that grow your price.
Tell me what your business is and your nearest goal — I'll tell you how to solve it with a website.
Message me