Digitalisation in the trades sounds like large software projects, expensive machines and complicated processes. For most businesses, though, it begins at a far more practical point: their own website. There are around one million (ZDH) skilled-trades businesses in Germany, and anyone looking today for a roofer, electrician, joiner or painting firm no longer opens a directory but searches on their smartphone. 76 percent (Google) of local smartphone searches lead to a contact or visit within 24 hours. Those who do not show up online, or who put people off with an outdated site, lose orders to the competitor who is found more easily. At the same time, the website is no longer just a shop window for customers but also a tool against the skills shortage: young tradespeople look for their next employer online. This article explains soberly why a good website brings tradespeople orders and applications, which functions really matter and how funding options can ease the entry into digitalisation.
Why Digitalisation in the Trades Begins with the Website
The trades are seen as down to earth, and that is a strength. Yet the way customers find a business has changed fundamentally. Anyone who needs a repair, a conversion or a service searches online for a provider nearby, reads reviews and often decides within minutes who to contact. Over 60 percent (StatCounter) of website visits now come from mobile devices, that is from a smartphone on the move or in the evening on the sofa. It is in exactly that moment that it is decided whether a business even makes the shortlist. A website is therefore not a nice-to-have but the digital first contact that almost every potential customer now goes through.
The right framing matters here: digitalisation in the trades does not mean joining every trend or introducing expensive systems that no one uses day to day. It means using sensibly the few tools that make a noticeable difference. And the most effective tool for most businesses is a website that loads fast, works on a phone, shows the range of services clearly and makes it easy for prospects to get in touch. Everything else, from digital order management to appointment booking, builds on this foundation.
Digitalisation is not an end in itself
The Website as an Order Machine
A trades business clocks off, the website never does. That is precisely where its greatest value lies: it receives enquiries while the lights in the workshop are long out. A prospect who googles a leaking pipe at ten in the evening finds a reachable contact, sees reference images of successful work and leaves an enquiry through a form or calls the next morning. Without a website, this prospect ends up with the competitor. The site does not replace good work, but it ensures that good work is asked for in the first place.
For this to work, the website has to do three things: get found, build trust and make contact easy. A business gets found above all through local search, that is when someone searches for the service plus the location. Trust arises from real photos of completed projects, clear details on services and service area, and a serious, well-kept look. And contact succeeds when phone number, enquiry form and address are reachable without long searching, ideally with one click to call straight from the smartphone. How to win more enquiries from existing traffic is explored in our article on conversion optimisation.
Get found regionally
Through local search and the Google Business Profile the business appears exactly when someone nearby is looking for the matching service.
Build trust
Real project photos, clear services and a well-kept look convince before a single word has been exchanged.
Make contact easy
Click to call, a short enquiry form and a visible address lower the hurdle of turning a visit into an enquiry.
Which Functions Really Matter
A trades website needs no gimmicks, just the right basic functions, cleanly implemented. What matters is that every function serves a goal: more enquiries, more applications or less effort in the business. The following list sums up what proves its worth in practice and what you can do without.
- Mobile optimisation so the site is fast and usable on a smartphone
- Click to call and a short enquiry form as a clear call to action
- A project gallery with real photos of completed work
- A clear service overview with service area and contact person
- A linked Google Business Profile for local visibility
- Fast load time, because slow pages lose visitors
- A visible careers section for open roles and training
More important than the number of functions is their quality. A project gallery with ten honest photos works more strongly than an overloaded page with bought stock images. A single, well-placed enquiry form brings more than five hidden contact options. And load time is not a technical detail but a revenue factor: if a page takes too long to load on a phone, visitors leave before they have seen anything at all. How to build local visibility deliberately is shown in our article on the Google Business Profile.
| Function | Value for orders | Value for applications |
|---|---|---|
| Mobile optimisation | Reaches customers on the move and in the evening | Young applicants search almost only on mobile |
| Click to call | Clearly lowers the hurdle to enquire | Direct line for spontaneous questions |
| Project gallery | Shows quality before the quote | Makes the business attractive as an employer |
| Local SEO | Business appears in nearby searches | Job searches are regional too |
| Careers section | Signals a stable business | Open roles and training made visible |
The Website as an Applicant Magnet amid the Skills Shortage
For many trades businesses the problem is not the missing order but the missing skilled worker to carry it out. The skills shortage is one of the biggest challenges in the sector (ZDH), and the classic newspaper job advert barely reaches young tradespeople anymore. Anyone looking today for an apprenticeship or a position researches the business online before applying. A website with a genuine careers section thus becomes the most important recruiting channel, often ahead of expensive portals.
A good careers section shows more than a list of open roles. It gives an honest insight into the business: the team, the projects, the values, the equipment. Applicants want to know where they will end up, and an authentic impression often decides more than pay alone. It is also important that applying is easy. A short form that works from a smartphone brings more applications than the demand to send documents cumbersomely by post or as large attachments. Every extra hurdle costs candidates.
One channel, two effects
Funding Options Put in Context
Digitalisation in the trades is supported in principle by the federal and state governments, and this can ease the entry. A sober view matters, because funding programmes change regularly, expire or are relaunched. At state level there are various programmes under names such as Digitalbonus that can subsidise investments in digitalisation and IT security (the federal funding database). Advisory and investment funding for small and medium-sized enterprises can also apply depending on the project. Whether and to what extent funding is possible depends on the federal state, the timing and the specific project.
How to approach funding properly
- Check current programmes via the federal funding database and the chamber
- Describe the project and costs clearly before a contract is awarded
- Submit the application in good time and in full, usually before project start
- Consider deadlines and reporting obligations from the outset
What a Trades Website Can Cost
There are no blanket prices, because the scope ranges from a few pages to an extensive website with a careers section, several locations and appointment booking. As a rough guide (Projekterfahrung), a solid, mobile-optimised website for a smaller business starts in the low four-figure net range, while a more extensive solution with many service pages, references and a recruiting section is correspondingly higher. On top of that come manageable ongoing costs for hosting and maintenance. These figures are orders of magnitude and do not replace an individual quote. More important than the price alone is the relation to benefit: a single additional order a month can carry the investment in a short time. An honest look at typical price ranges is given in our article on what a website costs.
A serious cost view also includes maintenance. A website is not a project you finish once and then forget. Content ages, technology needs updates, and new projects belong in the reference gallery. A business whose latest reference is three years old looks less active than one that regularly shows what it is working on. Why continuous care pays off is explained in our article on website maintenance.
How to Go About It
Clarify goals
What should the website achieve: more enquiries, more applications, less phone effort. The sensible scope follows from the goal, not the other way round.
Honesty includes the right expectations: a website does not sell on its own, and no site turns an overstretched business into a digital pioneer overnight. Orders and applications arise from the interplay of good work, clear presentation, local visibility and easy contact. The website is the frame in which all of this becomes visible. For trades businesses it is therefore the most pragmatic first step of digitalisation: manageable in effort, noticeable in effect and, in many cases, eligible for funding. A fitting trades website does not have to be large, it has to do the right things right.