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contractor sites graded, one A
Across the whole CRO Index, a single site earned an A. The median landed at a D. The grade gap is a conversion gap.
Right now, someone in Little Rock is Googling "roofer near me." We get you showing up first — then turn that click into a booked job.
A written report and a ranked fix list, in about three days.
“Patient, on point, straightforward. Did amazing work. Would 100% recommend.” — Ruben Mederos, HyperTemp HVAC
“Responsive, creative, exceeded expectations. Already seeing greater engagement from our clients.” — George Jeorgy, Jeorgy's Landscape Construction
“Top-tier professionalism, real web design expertise, ideas I hadn't considered. Confidently recommend.” — Aws Nassani, Four Eleven Contracting
60.8% of roofing sites we tested fail a critical accessibility check
Digital State of the Roofing Industry 2026A grade out of 380 contractor sites
We graded 380 of them against one framework. Exactly one earned an A: Crown Industrial Roofing in Toronto, at 90 out of 100. The rest left money on the table. Here is what separates the top from the bottom.
The local detail
Every angle below comes from how Little Rock actually searches, buys, and regulates — built into the page, not bolted on.
Here’s the thing nobody selling you a package wants to say out loud.
So much of the money gets decided before the phone ever rings.
You know those three businesses that show up under the little map when you search?
Picture a Tuesday in April.
Here’s the part the package-sellers skip.
So you run a roofing shop in Little Rock, and the same recycled playbook keeps landing in your inbox. Blog more. Get reviews. Build citations. But your phone goes quiet the week after a spring hailstorm tears through Chenal, while a crew you've never heard of pulls every call off Google. And the gap comes down to who shows up in the map pack when a panicked homeowner in The Heights types "roof leak near me" at 9pm. So roofing SEO in Little Rock rewards the shop that builds for that exact moment, on that exact phone. This page is about closing the gap, before the next system rolls down off the Ouachitas.
You've got 4 to 10 guys. You don't have time for theory. So let's talk about what moves your phone.

Here's the thing nobody selling you a package wants to say out loud. The metro is wider than it looks on a map.
A homeowner in Hillcrest sees a completely different result set than someone in West Little Rock, or Riverdale, or North Little Rock. Google serves by proximity first. So winning across the whole metro really means winning a dozen small searches, not one big one. And if your site says the city name twenty times but never names the Quapaw Quarter, Capitol View, or Stifft Station, you're invisible the second somebody searches from Briarwood. They almost always search from where they live.
And there's a climate wrinkle the national agencies miss completely. Pulaski County sits inside Dixie Alley. Roofs here do not age the way they do out west.
"In hail-prone states, average roof lifespan is 15 years vs 22 years in milder western states; 38% of U.S. homes have roofs in moderate to poor condition (Roofing Contractor) with 60% higher loss costs" — Verisk Analytics (2025)
So roofs in your service area fail seven years sooner than the milder-climate average, and a real chunk of the homes you drive past every day already need work. That's demand sitting on every street. The question is whether the homeowner on that street finds you, or finds the guy three towns over who built his pages right.
Think about where your trucks really go. Hillcrest. The Heights. Chenal. Riverdale. Capitol View. Stifft Station. Each one is its own little search market. And each deserves a page that names the streets, the housing stock, the typical roof age. A 1920s bungalow in Hillcrest needs a different pitch than a 2010-build in Chenal. When your site speaks to that, Google reads you as the local authority. When it doesn't, you're just another gray pin nobody clicks.
It stings, I know. You've been doing this twenty years and some two-year-old company sits above you on the map. But that company didn't out-roof you. They out-structured you. Their site loads fast, names twelve service areas, and has a tap-to-call button a homeowner can hit from a cracked phone screen at midnight. Yours probably makes them pinch-to-zoom. So that's it. That's the whole gap.

So much of the money gets decided before the phone ever rings. And the data backs that up hard.
"Among renovating homeowners, 44% add or redo a roof as part of their exterior projects." — Houzz Inc. (2024)
So nearly half the people redoing their exteriors are touching the roof. They're researching first. They open three or four tabs, read reviews, glance at a couple sites, and they're gone in under a minute if yours feels off. You never even knew they were there.
"In 2024, 22% of renovating homeowners undertook roofing upgrades, with a median spend of $13,000." — Houzz Inc. (2025)
So run the napkin math on that. Say your average reroof in the metro runs $14,000. If a tighter site turns just two more of those silent researchers into booked jobs a month, that's $28,000 in revenue you were leaving on the table every thirty days. Over a year, you're talking about a truck and a crew you could've added. That's not a marketing nice-to-have. That's payroll.
"97% of roofing customers expect a callback within one week. More than 50% expect a callback within two days." — Roofing Contractor Magazine (2024)
But here's what most shops get wrong. They obsess over ranking and ignore what happens after the click. If your site buries your phone number, or your form has nine fields, half your traffic bounces before they ever reach you. Ranking gets them to the door. The site has to let them in.
And once they're in your funnel, what they pick matters for how you build the pages around it.
"Among homeowners undertaking a roofing project, 63% choose asphalt roofing material (dimensional shingles 34%, three-tab shingles 19%, luxury shingles 10%), while 14% choose metal and 11% choose synthetic material or rubber." — Houzz Inc. (2024)
So most of your buyers want shingles, and a meaningful slice will pay up for metal or synthetic. Your pages should reflect that spread. A site that only shows one option quietly tells the premium buyer in Chenal to look elsewhere.

You know those three businesses that show up under the little map when you search? That's the pack. And it's where the bulk of local clicks land, above the regular blue links, before anybody scrolls.
Getting in is your Google Business Profile, your review velocity, your proximity to the searcher, and how tightly your website backs up what your profile claims. So this is where roofing SEO services Little Rock shops get paid. And the shops winning that box treat it like a system, not a one-time setup.
You probably have happy customers who'd leave a review if you asked at the right moment. Most shops ask once, badly, weeks later. Build a simple habit where every crew lead texts the homeowner a review link the day the job wraps, while they're still standing in the driveway admiring the new ridge cap. Ten reviews a month beats fifty reviews you scrounged in a panic last spring.
If your profile says you serve Maumelle but your website never mentions it, Google notices the mismatch and trusts you less. So the service-area pages on your site and the areas on your Business Profile need to line up exactly. Boring work. The kind that wins.

Picture a Tuesday in April. Clear morning, then by 4pm the sky goes green and golf-ball hail hammers everything from Sherwood to Cammack Village for fourteen minutes. And the next morning, every homeowner with a dented gutter is searching at once.
That's the surge. And whoever's already ranked owns it. You cannot build authority the morning after a storm. Google takes weeks to trust new pages, so the rankings you have when the hail hits are the rankings you'll live with through the whole claim cycle.
"From 2021–2023, homeowners spent $93.5B on roofing across 8.3 million projects (AHS-based estimates)." — U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (2024)
That's the size of the pie nationally. Your slice of it, in this city, gets decided in the quiet months between storms. The shops that win storm season built their pages in January.
Out-of-state crews flood Pulaski County after every big event. They run aggressive ads, knock doors, and vanish. You live here. You'll honor the warranty in 2031. But the homeowner panicking on Wednesday morning can't tell the difference from a search result. Your pages have to make the difference obvious, with real local language, real street names, real crew faces. Otherwise the chaser with a bigger ad budget books the job you should've had.
"Among homeowners who renovated in 2024, 84% used cash from savings and 29% used a credit card to fund renovation projects (multiple funding sources allowed)." — Houzz Inc. (2025)
A lot of folks pay out of pocket, even after a storm, even with a claim in flight. So the content that walks a homeowner through the claim process, plainly, builds trust before they ever call. You become the shop that explained it, not the one that just wanted a deposit.
Here's the part the package-sellers skip. Done right, this stuff stacks. Every neighborhood page you publish, every review you bank, every fast-loading service area you add, it all compounds. So a page you build today is still pulling calls in three years.
"The median spend on roofing upgrades in 2024 was 8% higher than in 2023 (median $13,000 in 2024)." — Houzz Inc. (2025)
And jobs are getting more valuable, not less. So an asset that books a $13,000 median job today books a bigger one next year, off the same page, with no new spend. That's the difference between a leaky funnel and a system. A leak you keep patching. A system keeps paying.
It's not a thousand thin pages. It's the right pages, built tight. A strong Google Business Profile. A handful of genuine neighborhood pages for the areas you serve, from Maumelle to Cammack Village. A site that loads in under two seconds on a phone and puts your number one tap away. Reviews coming in weekly on autopilot. So that's the whole machine. Nothing fancy. Just built right and left to compound.
We don't lead with a pitch. We lead with what we found.
Before any conversation about money, we look at your actual site the way a homeowner in The Heights would, on a phone, at 9pm, with a leak. We count the taps it takes to reach you. We check whether you load before they give up. We see if you name the suburbs you serve or just say "Central Arkansas" and hope. Then we hand you the findings, straight, no sales call required.
That obsession with the observable comes from a much bigger habit. We've run a structured inspection of roofing websites across the trade, scoring real shops on the things that decide rankings and conversions. So when we look at your site, we're not guessing. We're comparing you against a benchmark we built by hand.
The free Site Inspection is exactly that. You get a clear read on what's costing you calls, with the specific fixes, in plain language. No contract. No pressure. No sales call to get it. You look at it, you decide. And if the gaps it surfaces are ones you'd rather hand off than chase yourself, you'll know where to find us.
Either way, you walk away knowing precisely why the shop down the road keeps showing up first. And that's worth knowing before the next hailstorm rolls in.
The evidence
Read the full report → 0
contractor sites graded, one A
Across the whole CRO Index, a single site earned an A. The median landed at a D. The grade gap is a conversion gap.
0 %
of roofing sites fail a critical accessibility check
Scored against WCAG 2.1 AA with axe-core. A page that blocks a screen reader also blocks a paying customer.
Fervor Roofing State of the Industry, 2026
0 %
miss Google's mobile load-speed bar
Median mobile load lands at 7.88 seconds. Most of your traffic is on a phone, and most of them are gone before the hero paints.
Fervor Roofing State of the Industry, 2026
0 /100
is the average roofing grade
That is a D. The sites booking the work are not the ones with the biggest crews. They are the ones a few points higher on the things homeowners feel.
Two ways to start
Tell us where you are. We point you at the right next step — no sales call to get there.
Client review
“Nay did an amazing job, you know. He was really patient. He got the work done the way I told him and he was just on point with the website. Pretty straightforward process. No going around the bush. He just did amazing work and I would 100% recommend.”
How Fervor can help
Monthly SEO, content, and CRO. Fixed deliverables. No credits, no rollover. The compound growth engine.
Complete website system built to convert storm leads, planned projects, and research-phase homeowners into booked jobs.
Identify and patch the top conversion killers on your existing site. No full rebuild needed.
GBP optimization, citation building, and review system foundation. The infrastructure that gets you into the Map Pack.
One conversion-built landing page for the referrals, paid clicks, and cold-call leads you send. They land on a page built to book them, not your generic homepage.
Your move
Tell us where you are. We point you at the right next step — no sales call to get there.
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