The trades deserve better.
I called twelve plumbers in McAllen last summer. Eleven of them had a website that looked like it was built in 2008, in a hurry, on a free GoDaddy template. The twelfth had no website at all and the best Google reviews of the bunch.
That gap is the whole reason Built Web exists. The contractor with the better truck, the better crew, and the better rate is losing jobs to the one whose nephew built a Wix site in 2019. It is a quiet, daily theft of revenue, and it is fixable in 24 hours for $79 a month.
I am not an agency. There is no team. There is one operator, in South Texas, who builds the site, writes the copy in English and Spanish, takes the call when something breaks, and ships edits the same week you ask for them. That is the whole product.
The price is $79 because that is what it actually costs to do this well at scale. Not $4,000 up-front, then $50 a month for hosting and silence. Not free, with three days of onboarding videos to watch. $79 a month, cancel any month, money-back after the first thirty days.
The sites are bilingual because half of South Texas does business in Spanish and the other half has a grandmother who does. They are mobile-first because most of the calls come from a phone already in someone's hand. They have a real phone number, a click-to-call button, and a contact form that actually emails you. That sounds like the bare minimum and somehow it isn't.
If you run a shop in the Valley and you want a site that does not embarrass you, call me. If you want to see what one would look like for your trade, the three demos at builtweb.co/work are a good place to start.