Four sectors. A different architecture for each one.
Every sector has its own technical, regulatory and communication requirements. It is not the same website in another colour — it is a different structure, copy and strategy depending on who makes the buying decision, which regulations apply and through which channel the client arrives.
Each sector with its real case in production.
Four sectors covered with methodology and a verifiable project. Each one’s page documents how the architecture, the regulatory framework and the copy change according to the profile of the client who decides.
Industrial
B2B manufacturers, technical catalogues and international positioning.
View sector →
Corporate
Business groups, professional firms and services.
View sector →
Real estate
Property development, holiday rental and real estate asset management.
View sector →
Sports
Sports centres, clubs and online booking management.
View sector →Why a generic website does not work.
The working methodology is the same for any sector — business analysis, architecture, proprietary code. What changes are four variables a generic template ignores and that decide whether the website captures clients or not.
A B2B industrial buyer does not decide like a law firm’s client or a holiday rental guest. The web architecture is designed for the real profile that makes the decision in each sector.
Industrial works with ISO, IATF, EN 45545-2. Real estate with RD 933/2021 and tourist licences. Corporate with discretion and confidentiality. Each framework conditions the structure before coding.
An industrial manufacturer needs a technical register. A holding group, institutional restraint. A CrossFit box, community energy. The copy is written in the sector’s register, not generic.
Industrial captures through technical search and RFQ. Sport through local SEO. Real estate through a direct channel versus portals. The digital strategy adapts to the real channel of each sector.
Which sector does the company operate in?
First conversation with no commitment. The sector, the size of the company and the regulatory framework are understood, and we define which of the services — or combination of them — makes most sense for your case.