You've earned a reputation. Let's make it findable.
Randie — first, the good news, because there's a lot of it: your Facebook page is genuinely one of the best we've seen for a small contractor. Verified, a thousand followers, and a 100% recommendation rate across 80 reviews. The only problem is that most of the people who need a roofer after the next hailstorm will never see it — because they're searching Google, not Facebook. Here's what that costs you, and a simple plan to fix it.
What you've built (keep doing exactly this)
80 perfect reviews
“The crew completed our entire roof, replaced our decking, and installed some vents in just one day.” Reviews like that sell roofs. They become the centerpiece of the new site — with the Facebook page as living proof.
A pitch that needed zero editing
Free inspections and estimates. Works with all insurance companies. Licensed and insured. Repair, maintain, replace. We built the whole concept from your own words.
Real job photos, posted regularly
Your posting habit is a marketing engine most contractors never build. Nothing changes there — the site and the page will point at each other.
Where the leads are leaking
Google can't see you
When someone in Blue Springs searches “roofer near me” the morning after a storm, Facebook pages barely show up. Your 80 reviews are invisible at the exact moment they'd win you the job.
The Gmail address undersells you
randiesroofinginc@gmail.com works fine — but on an estimate sitting next to an insurance claim, randie@randiesroofing.com looks like the established business you actually are. (And that domain is sitting there available right now.)
Facebook owns your reach
Every photo and review lives on their platform, shown to whoever their algorithm picks, behind a login wall for everyone else. A website you own becomes the home base; Facebook stays what it's great at — proof and word-of-mouth.
Your insurance know-how has no home
“We work with all insurance companies” is your biggest promise, and a Facebook bio can't explain it. The concept gives it a four-step walkthrough: call → free inspection → we handle the claim → new roof.
The plan — about $94 a year, all in
- Grab randiesroofing.com — we checked, it's available. (~$10/year. Roofing is a crowded market; this won't stay unclaimed.)
- Professional email: randie@randiesroofing.com — it works inside the same Gmail you already use, and mail to the old address keeps arriving during the switch. (~$7/month.)
- Launch the website — the concept below, finished with your real job photos. Hosting is free.
- Set up your Google Business Profile and connect everything — this is what actually puts you in “roofer near me” results, with your reviews attached. (Free.)
- Point everything at the domain — yard signs, truck, estimates, and a pinned Facebook post.
See your website concept
Fair warning: this is a quick first pass — a sketch of the direction built from your page's own words. The final site will be more robust (your real job photos, before/afters, more pages) and every bit of it can be customized any way you want.