Serious shops outgrow marketing built to serve thousands. We're what comes after.
Most marketing companies are not evil. They are indifferent. Too many layers sit between the person who understands a comeback and the person who runs your ads, and nobody that far from the bay has to care. Not about taste. Not about your bays. Not about you.
You can tell. Every shop site they build looks the same, reads the same, and proves nothing. The report says clicks. It never says what a booked repair order cost you, or which service line to fix next. Indifference at scale is indistinguishable from incompetence.
Would you hand your best scan tool to your worst tech? Because that is the old way's plan for artificial intelligence: the most powerful tool the trades have ever seen, amplifying carelessness at machine speed.
We care enough that it became an engineering problem. And an engineering problem is the one thing the old way cannot fake: it has no engineers. So we put frontier models to work twice: once to build our software, and every day to run it. A phone that never rings out when the schedule is slammed. A follow-up that never forgets an open estimate. A number that never lies.
High technical acumen is high customer service. The machines handle the minutes so a person can answer when you call, not get back to you three weeks later. Proof over promises. Your goals, measured in booked jobs. That is the whole pitch.
We are not for every shop, and we will not pretend to be. Senior attention does not scale, so we keep the client list short on purpose. When we are full, we say so. When a spot opens, it goes to an owner who is serious about the work.
Or call us. That's the point.