Who we work for

Eight valley trades.
One method.

For each category we start from a proven structure and adapt it to your business: real content, the right photos, and features that actually matter. No copycat sites.

Sample structures

How a website changes depending on the business

Structural examples for typical valley businesses: how we tackle a concrete problem for each kind of business.

Restaurants & huts

Problem. Menu not updated online, phone ringing for the same questions over and over.

Fix. Menu page with daily specials, real photos and QR for the table. Table request in two taps.

Open category
Accommodation

Problem. Room and price information scattered across portals, social media and messages.

Fix. One clear page with rooms, location, availability and direct contact. Fewer third-party commissions.

Open category
Local producers

Problem. Products told well in person, but invisible to anyone searching online.

Fix. Product cards with origin, process and where to buy.

Open category
Wood artisans

Problem. Beautiful work, but no online showcase to prove it.

Fix. Gallery of pieces by type and material, with quote contact.

Open category
Sport & outdoor

Problem. Calendar and guide availability only over WhatsApp.

Fix. Activity page with dates, level, prices and booking form.

Open category
Events & tours

Problem. Poster on social today, gone tomorrow. Late-comers find nothing.

Fix. Event page with dates, program, tickets and archive of past editions.

Open category

Same structure, different content

A tidy base. Content that fits your work.

A method is not a copycat website. It is a tidy path adapted to you.

Sections that are always there
  1. Who you are
  2. What you offer
  3. Why pick you
  4. Real photos and content
  5. Contacts, bookings or inquiries
  6. Simple updates
What changes, for example
  • Restaurants & huts A restaurant puts menu, food photos and table booking front and center.
  • Accommodation A B&B leads with rooms, location and availability.
  • Local producers A local producer tells products, territory and points of sale.
  • Wood artisans A woodworker shows a portfolio by type and material, with a quote contact.
  • Sport & outdoor A mountain guide lists outings, levels, prices and a direct booking form.
  • Village shops A village shop explains what it sells, current hours and how to find it.
  • Professional services A professional office lays out skills, specialisations and how to book.
  • Events & tours An association publishes the programme, dates and an archive of past editions.

The method stays solid. The site speaks your business language.

What every site has

Four things we always include

  • Clear structure

    Tidy sections, visible hierarchy, no extra words.

  • Readable text

    No jargon. What you do, written plainly, even for newcomers.

  • Real photos and content

    Photos of your business and your work. No stock imagery.

  • Easy contact

    Phone, email, map, form or inquiry: visible in two taps.

Not on the list?

Your business is not exactly on the list?

No problem. Tell us what you do and we will help you figure out which structure fits best.

Tell us what you do →

Let's start together

Ready to grow
your business?

A 30-minute call is enough to find out if we can help. We'll talk about your site, your bookings, what you'd like to improve. No commitment, no sales pitch.

Let's talk about your project

No commitment, just useful ideas.