Florida flagship · Regional footprint

Service footprint & benchmark coverage

This site is intentionally Florida-first in its public research: the Florida Web Performance Index and most written industry reports are anchored in Florida because that is where the benchmark layer started and where we can be most specific. That does not mean our website work stops at the state line—we take selective performance website and landing-page projects across Southeast, Gulf South, and East Texas.

Use this page to separate three ideas that often get conflated: where we meet clients in person, where we ship website work, and what geography the public datasets emphasize.

Northeast Florida: in-person hub

We are headquartered in Palm Coast. For local service businesses, that usually means the corridor from Nassau County through Duval and St. Johns, Flagler, and Volusia—think Jacksonville through Daytona. Those markets have dedicated city-level pages (and related landing URLs) because that is where we can combine in-person collaboration with the same benchmark context we publish publicly.

We are not replacing those URLs. They remain the right entry points for “web design in [city]” intent and for Northeast Florida SEO. This hub sits one level above them to explain how they fit into a broader, honest footprint.

Website work: Southeast, Gulf South, East Texas

Beyond the Northeast Florida hub, we take selective engagements for performance websites and landing pages in: Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and East Texas. If you are in that band, the process is the same as remote Florida work: structured discovery, fast builds, Core Web Vitals–oriented delivery, and clear handoff—you are not buying a separate “data product.”

When you are outside Florida, we may have less published niche-level benchmark prose for your exact city, but the build standards (speed, structure, tracking, conversion clarity) do not change. If a comparison baseline helps, we still use the same measurement stack described in our methodology.

Public benchmarks vs. map sampling

The flagship public layer is the Florida Web Performance Index and the Florida-focused industry reports in the research library. That is the content we cite when we say “benchmark-backed”—it is deepest where we started.

The interactive benchmark map can include a wider multi-state sample for exploration. Treat it as contextual coverage and competitive orientation—not a promise that every state has the same written report depth as Florida. Partner-facing dataset access, where offered, is still a small side to website work; see partner benchmark data.

Next step

If you need a fast site or a rebuild—not a research subscription—start with services or reach out directly.