If you sell web design services to local businesses, the hardest part is often finding the right prospects. Quoin helps you identify local companies with weak or outdated websites so you can focus on businesses that may already need a redesign.
Why local prospecting is slow – Local outreach can work well for web designers, but the research is usually manual. You search maps, directories, and local listings, then open each website one by one to figure out whether the business is a fit. That process takes too long and makes it hard to stay consistent.
Spot local businesses with visible website issues
Quoin helps you review local business websites more efficiently by surfacing businesses whose sites may be outdated, hard to use, or underperforming. That gives you a practical way to build a local prospect list with more confidence.
Ideal use cases
- Freelancers targeting businesses in their town or region
- Designers specialising in a local niche, like trades or hospitality
- Agencies building outbound campaigns for location-based clients
- Studios looking for a repeatable prospecting workflow
How to find local redesign prospects with less manual work
1. Choose a location and business type
Start with the local market you want to serve, whether that is a city, postcode area, or business category.
2. Review website quality quickly
See which local businesses appear to have outdated or underperforming websites.
3. Prioritise likely opportunities
Focus on prospects that show clearer redesign signals instead of spreading your time across everyone.
4. Start better conversations
Use what you found on the website to make your outreach more relevant and more useful.
Why local businesses are a strong fit
Many local businesses depend on trust, mobile traffic, and clear calls to action. When their websites fall short, the opportunity for a redesign is often easy to explain and easy for the owner to understand.
Build a stronger local pipeline
Quoin helps you find local website redesign prospects faster, so you can spend less time researching and more time reaching out to businesses that actually need help.