Why a Brookstone pool builder fired his web designer mid-build.
A Kennesaw pool builder called us last spring, six months into a $19,000 site rebuild that was already broken. If you’re building $80K-and-up pools across the Kennesaw market and you’re tired of websites that look fine but never produce calls — this guide is the playbook.
Most Kennesaw pool-builder websites are pretty brochures, not sales tools.
Here’s the thing. The Kennesaw pool builder I mentioned at the top — established crew, twelve years in business, beautiful work in Brookstone and Legacy Park — paid an out-of-state design shop $19,000 for a “premium pool-builder website.” Six months later he still didn’t have a working contact form. The hero video didn’t play on iPhone. And his Google ranking for “pool builder Kennesaw” had actually dropped from page two to page five during the rebuild.
That’s not a unique story. It’s the rule for pool builders in this market. The agency that designed his site treated the project like a graphic design assignment instead of a sales asset. They cared about the parallax animation. They didn’t care that his average $90K project takes 11 weeks to build trust before a homeowner signs, and that the website is the very first trust-building moment in that 11-week chain.
Real talk: a Kennesaw pool buyer in Brookstone or Governors Towne Club spends roughly 9 minutes on a builder’s site before they ever pick up the phone. They scroll past the carousel. They look for project counts. They look for neighborhood names. They look for proof you’ve built something exactly like what they want — not a mood board.
The pool builders winning Kennesaw in 2026 don’t have the prettiest sites. They have sites that load in under 2.4s, show real Brookstone and Cameron Forest project addresses (with permission), and put a click-to-call button in the visitor’s pocket on every screen.
The good news? You don’t need to spend $19K to fix it. You need a site built around six conversion principles that 90% of pool-builder web designers ignore. The rest of this guide breaks them down.
Pretty brochure vs. conversion engine.
Same monthly traffic. Wildly different booked-consultation math.
| What you’re getting | Generic agency build | Pool-builder-specific build |
|---|---|---|
| Mobile load speed | 4.8s on a typical 4G connection | Under 2.4s with optimized assets |
| Project portfolio depth | One gallery page, mixed photos | Per-neighborhood case studies with addresses |
| Form-fill conversion rate | 0.6–1.1% of total visitors | 3.2–5.4% with a real funnel |
| Click-to-call placement | Footer only, hard to find on mobile | Sticky bar on every page, all screens |
| Local SEO foundation | One generic “service area” page | Twelve neighborhood pages, indexed and ranking |
A finished Cameron Forest backyard build — the kind of project a converting pool-builder site puts on its homepage in the first scroll.
Stop redesigning. Start re-architecting around the buyer.
You’ve probably been pitched a “redesign” by three different agencies in the last 18 months. New colors. New typography. A nice video reel up top. Same money pit, different paint job.
That’s the surface-level move. A redesign that ignores how a Kennesaw pool buyer actually shops will not move the needle. Buyer behavior in Kennesaw is specific: value-conscious, family-driven, references-heavy. North Cobb homeowners around Wade Green corridor and the Lake Allatoona areas are not the same buyer as a Buckhead client, and a generic luxury template aimed at Buckhead will read as “expensive and not for me” in Brookstone.
Here’s what actually works for pool builders in Kennesaw, Acworth, and Marietta. A site re-architected around the three questions a buyer is silently asking on every page. Question one: have you built a pool exactly like the one I want, near me? Question two: what does this realistically cost? Question three: do other people in my neighborhood trust you? When a site answers those three in the first 30 seconds, the form-fill rate doubles. Sometimes triples.
The Kennesaw pool buyer doesn’t need to be impressed. They need to feel like they already know you before they ever call. That’s a content architecture problem, not a design problem.— What 60+ pool-builder rebuild calls have shown us
That doesn’t mean design doesn’t matter — it does, especially the photo and video quality. But design serves the architecture, not the other way around. We’ve seen ugly, plain pool-builder sites in Bentwater and the Town Center corridor outperform six-figure builds because the boring stuff was right.
Six pieces. That’s the whole site.
Every Kennesaw pool-builder site we’ve rebuilt that doubled inquiries had the same six pieces. Skip any one and the funnel leaks.
What a converting pool-builder website looks like in 2026.
None of these are aesthetic decisions. They’re conversion decisions. Get the architecture right and the design choices become obvious.
Neighborhood-specific landing pages.
One page per Kennesaw neighborhood you actually serve — Brookstone, Legacy Park, Cameron Forest, Shiloh Valley, The Shores of Kennesaw, Bentwater, Bells Ferry, Pine Trace. Each page shows local builds, references local soil and HOA realities, and ranks for “pool builder [neighborhood]” instead of fighting for one generic “pool builder Kennesaw” keyword. Done right, this is the single highest-leverage move in pool-builder web design. Done wrong — thin, duplicated content — and Google will outright ignore you.
Per-project case studies, not galleries.
A gallery is a wall of pretty photos. A case study tells me a Bentwater family with two teens built this $112K pool in 14 weeks, and here’s the budget breakdown. Buyers click case studies. They scroll past galleries.
A real pricing page.
Most builders refuse to publish pricing. The ones who publish honest ranges — “$65K–$95K for fiberglass, $95K–$160K for gunite, $160K+ for custom” — close higher-quality leads. Vague pricing draws tire-kickers.
Mobile-first speed, sticky call bar, real review wall.
Sub-2.4s mobile load. A click-to-call bar that follows the visitor on every page. A reviews section pulled live from Google with real Kennesaw, Acworth, and Marietta neighborhood names visible. These three together typically lift form fills by 60–90% on the same traffic. They are not glamorous. They are the entire job.
Aerial of a recent Kennesaw build — the kind of asset that goes straight into a neighborhood case study, not a generic gallery.
How we rebuild a Kennesaw pool-builder site.
Audit + buyer interview
Two weeks. We interview your last 8 closed Kennesaw clients about how they shopped — what they Googled, what they almost clicked away from, what made them call. Half of every rebuild is solved here, before a single pixel moves.
Architecture + content build
Six weeks. Neighborhood pages drafted for the eight Kennesaw subdivisions you serve. Case studies built from your real archive. New photo and drone shoots scheduled at active Brookstone and Legacy Park jobs. Pricing page written and approved.
Launch + measure
Site goes live, sticky call bar enabled, mobile speed locked under 2.4s, Google indexing pushed. By month 3 we expect form-fills to lift 60%+ on the same traffic. By month 6, neighborhood pages start ranking for terms nobody in Kennesaw was competing for.
Behind the scenes on a Kennesaw shoot — every active build becomes a year of indexed neighborhood content for a converting pool-builder site.
The Brookstone pool builder who fired Angi after the rebuild.
That same Kennesaw pool builder I opened with — the one who’d already burned $19K on a broken site — was running about 1,800 monthly visitors with a 0.7% form-fill rate. Roughly 12 inquiries a month, mostly tire-kickers. 14 weeks after we relaunched on the new architecture, his monthly traffic was up to 2,950 visitors, his form-fill rate was at 4.1%, and he was fielding 121 monthly inquiries with an average project ask of $118,000. He killed his Angi spend by month 5. Hasn’t bought a shared lead since.
Monthly inbound form fills, post-relaunch.
Architecture compounds. Pretty redesigns don’t. The site keeps producing because the neighborhood pages keep ranking.
Mid-build content like this — shot during construction, not just at handover — is what fuels a real Kennesaw neighborhood case study.
Six questions every Kennesaw pool builder should ask a web designer.
If they can’t answer these clearly in a 20-minute call, they’re going to design a brochure. Walk before you sign anything.
“Show me a pool builder you took from X form fills to Y.”
Real conversion lift. Real timeline. Real before-and-after numbers, not “traffic up.” Anonymous case studies are a flag.
“How will you handle neighborhood pages?”
If the answer is “we’ll spin up a service-area page,” walk. The answer should be 8–12 distinct Kennesaw neighborhood pages.
“What’s your mobile speed target?”
Under 2.4s on 4G or you’ll lose 30% of your inquiries before they ever see your hero. Anything over 4s is broken.
“Will I have a real pricing page?”
If they push back on publishing ranges, they’re protecting their portfolio aesthetics over your lead quality. Wrong tradeoff.
“What do I own when this is done?”
Domain, hosting, source code, content, photo library, ad accounts. If “us” is the answer to any, you’re renting.
“How many pool builders specifically?”
A pool-builder site is not a roofer site is not a landscaper site. Niche depth shows up in the architecture in week one.
The kind of finished project that becomes a year of marketing assets when shot right — and a converting case study page when published right.
What Kennesaw pool builders keep asking us.
Eight to twelve weeks if your photo library is solid and your team can sit for the buyer-interview phase. Twelve to sixteen if we have to schedule fresh drone shoots at active Kennesaw builds and rewrite the entire content stack. Anyone promising a 30-day turnaround for a serious pool-builder site is using a template they’ll skin three times for three different clients.
Working range we see is $14K–$32K for a serious rebuild that includes neighborhood pages, case studies, fresh content shoots, and a 6-month SEO ramp. Under $14K and corners are getting cut on either content or speed. Over $32K and you’re paying for someone’s portfolio prestige rather than your conversion rate.
Yes, always. The biggest mistake we see in Kennesaw is builders pulling their existing site offline three weeks before launch and watching their phone go silent during peak season. Real rebuilds happen in staging, then we cut over in a single afternoon with redirects mapped to preserve every existing ranking.
No. One pool builder per city, full stop. We will not run web design or marketing for two pool builders in Kennesaw, two in Acworth, or two in Marietta at the same time. That conflict-of-interest line is the whole reason we can promise category dominance to our pool-builder clients.
We map every existing URL to a new one before launch and push 301 redirects on day one. Done correctly, you keep every ranking you had and gain new ones from the neighborhood pages. Done incorrectly, you can lose 6 months of traffic in a single week. Ask any web designer how they handle redirects before they touch your site.
Imagine a Kennesaw pool-builder site that converts visitors into 121 monthly inquiries.
If you want a 30-minute call where we audit your current site speed, your Kennesaw neighborhood coverage, and the top three competitors ranking against you — that’s free. We do a few of these a week with pool builders across the broader North Atlanta corridor.
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