process / packages

Good business websites are built around how customers decide, not around a generic template.

The gallery shows the output. This page explains the logic behind it so a business owner can see how structure, positioning, and visual direction work together before the real project starts.

Different industries should not sell the same way.

A restaurant, a brewery, a salon, and a service company do not need the same first screen, proof points, or call to action sequence.

Style should change the feel, not just the palette.

Traditional and modern directions should each change hierarchy, density, emphasis, and perceived value, not just the colors.

how Summitbyte approaches this

One shared system underneath, different decision paths on top.

01

Start with how the customer decides, not with a preselected layout style.

02

Choose the section order, proof modules, and calls to action around that buying behavior.

03

Set the visual direction to match the business position, audience expectations, and risk tolerance.

04

Keep the final build maintainable without flattening everything into one generic template.

what changes by business type

Each category gets its own conversion logic and proof sequence.

Restaurants Lead with menu clarity, atmosphere, hours, and reservation confidence.
Breweries Surface events, releases, tap lists, and brand energy so the site feels active.
Retail Guide shoppers through collections, featured goods, and convenience signals.
Salons Prioritize booking, personality, transformations, and stylist trust.
Service businesses Push trust, service area clarity, quote intent, and proof of work earlier.
Wellness studios Balance schedule access, coaching fit, memberships, and community cues.

traditional vs modern

The style choice changes the presentation system, not just the finishing layer.

Both directions can be valid. The right answer depends on audience expectations, the business position, and how much visual distinction should do the selling.

decision rule

If the business wins on trust and convenience, traditional is often the better fit. If perceived quality and differentiation are part of the offer, modern usually earns more.

traditional direction

Familiar, practical, and lower-risk.

This direction keeps information density higher and decision-making simpler. It is usually the safer fit when trust, clarity, and utility matter more than standing out aggressively.

  • Information appears earlier and with less visual friction.
  • Layouts feel recognizable to broader local-business audiences.
  • Best when the business wants dependable presentation first.

service tiers

Pricing and final service packages still live on Summitbyte.

This demo is a sales asset, not a separate offer. Once someone sees a direction that feels right, the next step is the main Summitbyte services page and contact flow.

Go to services and pricing

next step

If one of the demo directions feels close, Summitbyte can build the real version for your business.

The point is not to sell a canned template. It is to make the conversation faster by showing what stronger structure, presentation, and positioning could look like for the business you actually run.