What follows is not a built website. It's a directional concept — what a custom Truck Gear platform could look like across desktop, tablet, and phone. Scroll to walk through it the way a customer would experience it. The actual site would be built around your photography, your team, your install bays.
The homepage carries the whole brand in one screen. Hero photography of a finished build, the two-location story front and center, online booking as the primary CTA — not a "contact us" form buried in the footer.
Industrial typography. Steel-blue accents. Grid background that reads blueprint, not template. Customers know they're somewhere serious within three seconds.
Edmond and Shawnee aren't a phone number in the header. Each shop gets its own landing experience — address, hours, install services, team, reviews specific to that location.
That's not just better customer experience. It's also how Google ranks you for "bedliner Edmond" and "lift kit Shawnee" separately — instead of one page trying to rank for both.
Our flagship Lincoln Boulevard shop. Six install bays, full product line, the same crew of installers we've had for years.
Customers asking about install times, product fitment, pricing, scheduling — at any hour. The platform's built-in AI assistant answers with shop-accurate information, books installs, and routes anything serious to your team.
This is the same kind of assistant powering the chat widget on this very proposal. Watch a real conversation play out on the phone to the right. The assistant knows your services, your locations, your hours, and your brands.
What you just scrolled through is a directional design — the feel, the architecture, the aesthetic. The actual platform is built around your shops, your photography, your customers, your inventory. We come to Edmond, walk through every detail with you, and start the work.