Airframe is a procurement-grade, dashboard-style landing page built for commercial aircraft manufacturers. It features a cinematic factory assembly hero, animated fleet telemetry counters, and an interactive side-by-side comparison cockpit. Designed for airline procurement directors and leasing analysts, it uses a warm stone color system and a data-first layout to turn fleet evaluation visits into qualified leads.
by Rocket studio
Airframe is a single-page, data-command landing page template built for commercial aircraft manufacturers. It combines a cinematic factory assembly header with an interactive comparison cockpit, animated fleet statistics, and a scroll-triggered call-to-action bar. The warm stone palette and structured checklist layout give procurement evaluators the clarity they need to make high-stakes fleet decisions.
This template is built for aerospace and defense organizations that need to convert sophisticated, high-value evaluators rather than casual browsers. The layout assumes the reader arrives with a spreadsheet already open.
Procurement evaluators in commercial aviation do not respond to marketing language. They need structured, auditable evidence that lets them compare options row by row. Standard landing pages cannot hold this audience. They leave the moment the copy feels like advertising rather than data.
You get a fully structured, five-section landing page with high interactivity and a carefully sequenced conversion flow. Every section is purpose-built for the aerospace procurement context described in the brief.




Theme
Data Command
Creative direction
Checklist & Audit
Color system
Warm Stone
Style
Dashboard/Data Grid
Direction
Comparison/Versus
Page Sections
Cinematic Factory Assembly Hero
Animated Fleet Telemetry Counters
Interactive Side-by-side Comparison Cockpit
Scroll-triggered Persistent Call-to-action Bar
Gated Secondary PDF Download
Certification and Trust Bento Grid
Who is this landing page template built for?
Can I customize the comparison cockpit criteria?
How does the scroll-triggered call-to-action bar work?
Is there a lower-commitment option for analysts still shortlisting?
What design style and typography does this template use?
This template is built around a set of deliberate, interconnected capabilities. Each one serves the specific workflow of a fleet procurement evaluation.
The header uses a slow dolly shot moving along the fuselage from nose cone to empennage. Workers in clean suits and robotic arms are shown in context. Telemetry data ticks upward in the lower third, displaying units delivered, fleet-wide flight hours, and dispatch reliability climbing past 99.7 percent. No voiceover is needed because the numbers speak.
A dedicated fleet statistics section runs animated counters for 2,847 units delivered, 94 million flight hours accumulated, and a 99.7 percent dispatch reliability figure. These counters activate on scroll entry and give the evaluator immediate confidence before they reach the comparison grid.
This is the core of the template. A side-by-side checklist grid lets the visitor toggle between the manufacturer's aircraft and anonymized competitor benchmarks. Nine criteria are covered: range and payload, seat-mile cost, engine options, maintenance interval hours, cabin cross-section width, cargo volume, noise footprint, and carbon output per passenger-kilometer. Data rows reveal as the visitor scrolls, building a cumulative case.
A bottom bar requesting the fleet economics report activates only after the visitor has scrolled past at least three comparison modules. This sequence earns the ask with evidence first. The form captures airline or lessor name, current fleet composition via dropdown, evaluation timeline, and a single open field for specific route pairs to be modeled.
A lower-commitment exit path offers a specification comparison PDF gated behind only an email address. This captures analysts who are still building their shortlist without requiring full form completion.
A bento grid section displays regulatory certifications, operator logos, and program milestones. This section provides the institutional credibility layer that procurement boards require before escalating an evaluation.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero Assembly Line | Cinematic factory header with floating telemetry data cards |
| Fleet Statistics Bar | Animated counters for deliveries, flight hours, dispatch reliability |
| Comparison Cockpit Grid | Interactive side-by-side checklist with competitor toggle |
| Certification Trust Bento | Regulatory badges, operator logos, program milestones |
| Technical Specifications Bento | Asymmetric aircraft cutaway with spec callouts |
| Footer Row | Linear single-row footer with navigation and legal links |
The visual identity follows a Data Command theme expressed through a warm stone color system. The palette feels like a procurement dossier left open on a mahogany desk: authoritative but unhurried, warm enough to spend hours inside without the fatigue of a clinical aerospace datasheet.
The template is built desktop-first, which reflects how airline procurement directors and leasing analysts actually work. Large comparison grids and spec tables are designed for widescreen layouts with multiple reference documents open side by side.
The conversion architecture is deliberately sequenced. The template does not ask for commitment before it delivers evidence.
This template is part of the Aerospace and Defense category under the Aircraft and Aviation subcategory, positioned specifically for the commercial aircraft manufacturer niche. A few additional points worth noting for teams evaluating this template: