Bore is a single-column landing page template built for drilling contractors who work on municipal, commercial, and environmental projects. It presents each service as a technical spec card, leads with verified project data, and drives B2B inquiries through a scoped "Request a Bore Plan" form and a gated rig specs download. The result is a page that earns trust before it asks for the call.
by Rocket studio
Bore is a precision drilling landing page template designed for contractors who need to win bids from engineers, municipalities, and utility companies. It follows a Spec Sheet creative direction, presenting water well drilling, geotechnical investigation, horizontal directional drilling, and environmental monitoring wells as structured technical profile cards. The page converts through data, not decoration.
This template is built for drilling contractors operating at a professional and commercial scale. The design assumes a client base that reads specs before they read testimonials, and it speaks directly to technical decision-makers who need confidence before issuing a scope of work.
Most contractor websites bury the details that technical buyers need most. Engineers and project managers do not have time to request a brochure just to learn what depth a rig can reach or what soil conditions a crew can handle. This template solves that by putting the numbers front and center, in a format that mirrors how project professionals already think.
The template delivers a full single-column flow landing page structured around technical service profiles. Every section has a defined job, from the panoramic header that sets scale and credibility to the persistent footer call-to-action bar that captures inquiries without interrupting the reading flow.




Theme
Civic Service
Creative direction
Spec Sheet
Color system
Rainforest
Style
Single Column Flow
Direction
Partnership/B2B
Page Sections
Panoramic Aerial Hero Section
Technical Service Spec Cards
Scoped Project Inquiry Form
Gated Rig Specifications Download
Persistent Footer Call-to-action Bar
Can I update the service spec cards with my own rig data?
What does the Request a Bore Plan form collect?
Is the gated rig specs download suitable for early-stage leads?
Who is this landing page template built for?
Can the template work if I offer only one or two drilling services?
This section describes the core components built into the Bore landing page template.
The header stretches edge to edge and features a wide aerial photograph of a drill rig centered on a cleared site. Morning light, exposed red clay, and two crew members in hard hats communicate scale and operational reality before a single line of body copy is read. A single headline fades in over the sky.
Each drilling service is presented as a structured profile card. The card format includes maximum depth, casing diameters, soil types handled, rig model deployed, and a project photo with GPS coordinates. The cadence escalates section by section, building authority through accumulating data rather than marketing language.
The primary conversion path collects project location (address or GPS input), estimated depth or scope, project type (municipal, commercial, residential, or environmental), and a timeline selector with options for emergency response, 30-day mobilization, and bid-stage planning. The call-to-action reads "Request a Bore Plan."
A secondary lead path offers a downloadable rig specs document. Visitors provide their name, company, and email address to access the file. This qualifies leads who are actively comparing contractors but are not yet ready to define a project scope.
A fixed footer bar keeps the primary call-to-action visible throughout the scroll. It anchors at the bottom of each service spec card as well as at the page footer, ensuring the inquiry path is never more than a glance away.
The Rainforest palette is applied with deliberate intent. Deep canopy green and groundwater teal carry structural weight across backgrounds and section containers. Survey-stake orange is reserved exclusively for calls-to-action and specification callouts, creating a clear visual hierarchy that guides the eye without distraction.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Panoramic Hero | Establish scale and credibility with aerial drill-site imagery and headline |
| Water Well Card | Profile water well drilling service with depth, casing, and soil data |
| Geotechnical Card | Present geotechnical boring specs for pre-construction ground investigation |
| HDD Service Card | Detail horizontal directional drilling capability under roads and waterways |
| Monitoring Wells Card | Cover environmental monitoring well installation as a technical service |
| Project Inquiry Form | Capture scoped leads with location, depth, project type, and timeline fields |
| Rig Specs Download | Gate a rig specifications document behind a short lead qualification form |
| Footer call to action Bar | Persistent inquiry anchor visible at page bottom and after each service card |
The visual identity follows a Civic Service theme built on the Rainforest color system. The palette is grounded and functional, referencing the actual terrain where drilling crews work rather than generic industry imagery. Every color choice has a defined role, keeping the interface readable and purposeful.
The single-column flow layout is a natural fit for mobile viewing. Content stacks cleanly from the panoramic header through each service card to the inquiry form, without requiring horizontal scrolling or complex grid rearrangements. The layout was designed with field-based users in mind.
The Bore template is engineered around the decision-making behavior of technical buyers. Conversion is not driven by persuasion; it is driven by completeness. A municipal engineer or general contractor who finds every data point they need on a single page is far more likely to submit a scoped inquiry than one who has to follow up for basic specifications.
The Bore template sits within the Mining and Natural Resources category, with a specific focus on the drilling contractor niche. It was designed at the intersection of civic infrastructure and B2B outreach, making it relevant for contractors who bid on both public-sector and private commercial projects. The template style is a single-column flow, which keeps the reading experience linear and focused.