Berth is a single-page landing page template built for marina management platforms targeting harbormasters, marina owners, and yacht club operators. It combines a cinematic dark operations-room aesthetic with a scroll-driven audit structure, comparison tables, and a dual-path conversion system. The template helps marina managers turn operational frustration into a decisive call to action.
by Rocket studio
Berth is a high-impact landing page template designed for marina management software platforms. It uses a dark, instrument-panel visual system and a checklist-and-audit scroll structure to name every inefficiency marina managers live with daily. The template guides visitors from recognition to conversion through diagnostic sections, head-to-head comparison tables, social proof metrics, and a targeted audit form.
This template suits any team launching or promoting a marina operations platform that competes on data, automation, and efficiency. It speaks directly to the people who feel the weight of legacy systems every morning.
Marina managers carry a large number of overlapping tasks across slip assignments, fuel logs, billing cycles, and maintenance schedules. Without a unified system, every one of those tasks creates friction, errors, and revenue loss. This template makes that friction visible and frames the platform as the fix.
The template delivers a complete single-column flow landing page structured around operational credibility and comparison-driven urgency. Every section has a defined role in moving marina operators from awareness to action.




Theme
Dashboard Pro
Creative direction
Checklist & Audit
Color system
Carbon Fiber
Style
Single Column Flow
Direction
Comparison/Versus
Page Sections
Operations Room Hero Section
Checklist and Audit Scroll
Head-to-head Comparison Tables
Dual-path Conversion System
Social Proof and Outcome Metrics
Sticky Audit Call-to-action Bar
What types of marinas is this template designed for?
Can I edit the checklist rows and comparison table content?
Does the template include the audit form and PDF download path?
Is this template suitable for port management and larger vessel operations?
How does the sticky call-to-action bar behave?
This template packages a focused set of conversion-ready features that reflect how marina operations actually run. Each section is built to do real work.
The hero opens with a full-bleed photograph of a live marina operations room. Monitors show slip grids, a VHF radio sits mid-desk, and a whiteboard lists haul-out dates. A single headline fades in over the image. The visual language immediately signals authenticity to any harbormaster who has stood in that room.
The page scrolls through five operational areas as diagnostic checklists. Each row uses red marks for what legacy systems get wrong and green checks for what the platform resolves. Rows stagger in on scroll, building urgency through recognition. This format helps marina managers see their own daily process failures named and addressed, one by one.
Comparison tables appear between audit sections. They pit the platform against spreadsheets, generic property management software, and a leading marina competitor. Specific capability rows include items like automated wait-list progression and real-time fuel-dock metering. Hover states on each row enhance readability and focus attention on key differentiators.
The primary call to action is "Run Your Free Marina Audit," placed after the third checklist section and repeated as a sticky bottom bar. The form collects marina name, total slip count via dropdown, and current management method. A secondary path offers a gated PDF download called "Download the Switchover Checklist," capturing email and facility size from operators not yet ready to commit.
A dedicated section displays outcome data alongside harbormaster testimonials. Metrics include a 34% booking increase, over 40 minutes saved per contract, and revenue tripling outcomes. Authentic testimonials with name and title give marina managers the peer validation they need before clicking through.
After the comparison tables, a sticky bottom bar keeps the primary audit call to action visible throughout the remainder of the scroll. The bar uses signal-flag red to draw attention without disrupting the dark instrument-panel reading experience.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero Operations Room | Full-bleed photo with fade-in headline establishes operational credibility |
| Slip Management Audit | Checklist teardown of slip assignment failures and platform resolutions |
| Billing Audit Checklist | Diagnoses billing dispute patterns and automated billing remedies |
| Maintenance Audit Checklist | Surfaces missed haul-out and maintenance scheduling risks |
| Fuel Tracking Audit | Covers real-time fuel-dock metering gaps and platform solutions |
| Member Communications Audit | Flags wait-list and communication failures in legacy systems |
| Comparison Tables | Side-by-side capability rows versus spreadsheets and competitors |
| Social Proof Metrics | Outcome data and named harbormaster testimonials |
| Audit Form Section | Primary "Run Your Free Marina Audit" form with slip count dropdown |
| PDF Download Path | Secondary gated download for operators still evaluating |
| Footer Row | Linear single-row footer with navigation and compliance links |
The visual identity follows a Dashboard Pro theme using a Carbon Fiber color system. The palette reads like the cockpit of a center-console at night: dark, functional, and precise. Every illuminated element serves a purpose.
The template is built desktop-first to serve harbormaster teams working at operations desks. Responsive behavior is included to support mobile access for operators checking in from the dock or on a device at the fuel berth.
This template is engineered for Comparison/Versus conversion. The scroll strategy builds urgency by making visitors recognize their own operational failures before the call to action ever appears.
This template is part of a broader marina industry ecosystem where cloud based solution options are increasingly replacing paper-based port management workflows. Berth planning, berth allocation, and vessel scheduling across ports are challenges that extend well beyond recreational marinas to container port terminals and facilities managed by port authorities overseeing large-scale port operations. The template's comparison strategy is directly informed by the competitive landscape, including platforms like Marinapy, Marina Master, and Slipwise, each of which serves different segments of the marina management software market. The template can suit teams that want to position their cloud based platform as the more purpose-built option in a field where generic management software often falls short. It is utilized by product and marketing teams who need a conversion-ready page that combines expert knowledge of marina operations with a data-driven visual system. The page structure can integrate naturally into a wider go-to-market program, giving the sales team a focused entry point to qualify inbound leads by facility size and current management method.