Quote, estimate, call, gallery, service-area, and contact paths from public pages
Contractors
Find broken quote paths before homeowners give up on the request.
Contractor websites need to move visitors from project interest to a call, quote form, gallery, or service-area page. Those paths often break after seasonal campaigns, gallery updates, subcontractor page edits, or tracking-script changes. SiteLeak turns public website evidence into a checklist a contractor, office admin, or web vendor can retest without a sales call.
Customer-path evidence this page checks
Broken same-domain service, project, location, and quote links sampled from the homepage
Form evidence for quote requests, including submit visibility, disabled states, contact fields, and required labels
Mobile first-screen CTA evidence for call or quote actions when browser checks are available
Trust-path evidence such as visible contact info, privacy/terms links, review cues, and insecure asset hints
Why contractor sites need repeatable checks
A contractor can lose form requests when a gallery link breaks, a quote form lacks a contact field, or a mobile visitor cannot find the call button. These are practical website maintenance issues, not broad marketing theory.
How to prioritize fixes
Fix anything that blocks quotes, calls, service-area navigation, or project proof before polishing lower-risk content and metadata issues.
Where monitoring helps
Weekly monitoring is useful after campaigns, template changes, and plugin updates because it can flag newly broken paths instead of relying on someone to notice manually.
Who this page is for
Owner-operated contractors who rely on phone calls, quote forms, and project galleries.
Office admins who update service pages, promotions, and seasonal campaign links.
Small agencies maintaining local service websites where quote paths must keep working.
Common customer-path leaks
Request-a-quote buttons point to an old landing page or a missing form route.
Gallery or project links break after CMS cleanup, making trust proof harder to inspect.
Phone numbers are shown as plain text instead of tap-to-call links on mobile.
Required quote-form fields are unlabeled or the submit button is disabled.
Service-area pages have no clear route back to a phone, quote, or contact action.
What SiteLeak checks
- Quote, estimate, phone, contact, service-area, and gallery links available on public pages.
- Broken same-domain links that can stop visitors before they request work.
- Form structure signals for quote requests and contact handoffs.
- Mobile first-screen CTA evidence when browser checks are available.
- Trust cues including visible contact details, reviews/testimonials, privacy links, and browser errors.
What it does not do
- It does not submit quote forms, upload project files, or create fake customer inquiries.
- It does not log into CRM, scheduling, dispatch, or review-management tools.
- It does not estimate job value or guarantee a change in lead volume.
Example findings
Quote request link leads to a dead page
The public quote CTA resolves to a missing same-domain URL during sampled link checks.
Fix: Point the CTA to the active quote form or a working contact page and retest the path.
Service page has no obvious contact path
The page evidence shows no phone link, email link, contact link, quote link, or form signal.
Fix: Add a clear call or quote action near the service description and verify it on mobile.
No review or social proof signal was found
The scan does not find review, testimonial, rating, or relevant social proof signals in public page text or links.
Fix: Add truthful project proof, testimonials, or review links where homeowners look for trust cues.
Questions this scan can answer
Does SiteLeak send test quote requests?
No. It checks public form structure and customer-path evidence without submitting quote forms or creating fake leads.
Is this useful for service-area pages?
Yes. The report can flag broken service-area links, weak contact paths, missing call actions, and page evidence that a website maintainer can verify.
Can a contractor use this without a web team?
Yes. The free scan shows top issues, and the paid report is written as a handoff for whoever manages the site.