Fire safety sites built
around compliance trust signals.
Property managers don't shop fire-safety vendors the way they shop other services — they shop for credentials, certifications, and proof the company can actually show up on a tight regulatory timeline. Most fire-safety websites bury that information; ours surface it in the first scroll.
Fire inspection, sprinkler, extinguisher servicing, alarm monitoring, and life-safety compliance is a deeply credentialed category. The buyer is almost always a property manager or facilities lead operating against a code-driven deadline (annual inspections, post-renovation sign-offs, occupancy permits). They're not browsing — they're searching with intent, comparing two or three options on credentials first, price second.
Generic web design treatment loses in this category. Stock photos of fire extinguishers, vague "trusted since 19XX" copy, dense service lists buried below the fold. The sites that win move accreditations, certifications, service-area maps, and quote-request CTAs above the fold — and back them up with a fast, mobile-first build that loads cleanly on a property manager's phone between meetings.
We shipped the Ohmtech build (ohmtech.ca) in 2022 — Vancouver and Fraser Valley fire inspection company. The pattern that worked there is the pattern we'd run again for any fire-safety operator in BC or elsewhere.
The work that actually
moves bookings.
Accreditations, certifications, license numbers, and years-in-operation surfaced in the hero block. The first 3 seconds answer "are they qualified?" — everything else follows.
One page per inspection / service line (sprinkler, extinguisher, alarm, monitoring, code compliance), each with clear scope, typical timeline, and a quote-request CTA scoped to that service.
Property managers self-qualify by location. Clear service-area lists or maps (Vancouver, Burnaby, Surrey, Fraser Valley, etc.) so prospects know in 5 seconds whether you cover their portfolio.
Quote-request form designed to qualify in three fields: building type, service needed, target timeline. Anything more is friction; anything less burns the team's time on follow-up calls.
Plain-English explainers of BC Fire Code, NFPA standards, and the inspection cadences property managers are responsible for. Earns long-tail organic + emits FAQ schema for rich-result eligibility.
GBP setup, citation hygiene across health/safety directories, schema with `FireInspectionService` or appropriate category, and the technical floor (Core Web Vitals, schema markup) competitors usually skip.
What you'll get.
- 01Property-manager prospects arrive self-qualified by service area and inspection type
- 02Compliance angle reads in three seconds — the credibility signal this category buys on
- 03Local-pack rankings for service + neighbourhood combinations across your real coverage area
- 04An intake workflow that doesn't burn your team's time on "do you cover X?" follow-ups
- 05A site your office manager updates monthly without filing a developer ticket
From the
studio blog.
Web design playbook for BC contractors and trades — the anatomy that converts, vertical-specific patterns, and 2026 pricing.
The 11-item local SEO checklist we run for BC service businesses — Map Pack signals, citations, schema, and what realistically moves the phone.
What local SEO actually costs BC service businesses in 2026, what each retainer tier should include, and how to evaluate a BC agency before signing.
Section by section: what a 2026 landing page hitting 8–15% conversion actually contains, and the micro-decisions that move the needle.
The 2026 Core Web Vitals thresholds, why field data matters more than Lighthouse scores, and the highest-leverage fixes for marketing sites.
How this gets
built.
What fire safety & inspection
actually ask.
Building for
fire safety & inspection?
Thirty-minute call, no slide deck, no salespeople. Tell us what you're working on and we'll tell you honestly whether we're the right team.