Dmnage - Trusted Moving Landing Page Template
Déménage is a split-screen landing page built for a Paris-based moving company. It guides anxious renters through every common objection before asking for anything. Press mentions, real crew photography, and FAQ-driven scroll sections build trust section by section. The single call to action routes every visitor toward one detailed quote form.
by Rocket studio
Quick summary
Déménage is a single-page, click-through landing page for a Paris moving company. The layout is a 50/50 split screen. Each scroll section pairs a real renter question on the left with a specific, calming answer on the right. The page earns trust first, then pushes visitors toward a quote form with one clear call to action.
Who this template is for
This template is built for moving companies that serve urban clients with complex logistics. It fits teams whose strongest sales tool is their track record, not a flashy product demo.
- Parisian movers handling walk-up apartments, narrow staircases, and no-elevator buildings
- Companies serving expats, young couples upsizing, and corporate relocation managers who need formal invoicing
- Service businesses that want a click-through page focused entirely on earning the quote request
What problem this template solves
Most moving company pages ask for a lead before they answer a single question. Visitors arrive anxious about cost, parking permits, fragile parquet, and Sunday availability. They leave before they ever tap a button.
- The FAQ-driven scroll structure answers every common objection in the order a stressed renter actually thinks through them
- The single call-to-action model removes friction by keeping all form fields off this page entirely
- The press mentions header builds credibility the moment the page loads, before the visitor reads one word of copy
What you get with this template
You get a fully structured landing page designed to convert cautious Parisian renters into quote requests. Every section has a clear job and a clear boundary.
- A split-screen frame with a press mentions bar at the top, real crew photography on the right, and media clippings on the left
- A series of FAQ scroll sections, each ending with a micro call-to-action that routes to the same quote page
- A mobile-fixed call-to-action button in signal orange that stays pinned to the bottom of the screen on smaller devices
Feature list
This section covers the core functional and design capabilities delivered by this template.
Split-Screen FAQ Scroll Layout
Every scroll section divides the viewport 50/50. The left side carries the question a renter types at midnight. The right side delivers the specific answer, including pricing tiers, included services, or a mini-calculator prompt. The format feels conversational rather than promotional.
Press Mentions Header Bar
A horizontal bar sits above the split-screen frame. It displays media logos alongside a star rating and a pull quote. This placement puts social proof at the very first point of visual contact, before any copy asks for trust.
Mobile-Fixed Call-to-Action Button
On mobile viewports, the primary call-to-action button stays pinned to the bottom of the screen at all times. Visitors never have to scroll back up to find the next step. The button uses signal orange to stay visually distinct from every other element on the page.
Micro Call-to-Action System
Each FAQ answer ends with a small, specific action link. These micro calls to action use direct phrasing tied to the question just answered. All of them route to the same quote form page, creating multiple low-pressure entry points across the scroll.
No On-Page Form Fields
This template deliberately keeps all form inputs off the landing page. The page's only job is to answer objections and earn the click. This reduces cognitive load and keeps the visitor focused on building confidence rather than filling out fields.
Service Utility Color System
The palette uses soft overcast white, Haussmann limestone, and deep moving-blanket navy as the base. Signal orange appears only on calls to action and price callouts. The contrast is intentional: the orange reads like the one moving truck double-parked on a pale Paris morning.
Page sections overview
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Press Mentions Bar | Opens with media logos and a star rating to establish credibility immediately |
| Split-Screen Header | Left shows media clippings; right shows crew photography on a Paris staircase |
| Cost FAQ Section | Answers pricing questions with specific tiers and a mini-calculator prompt |
| Parking and Permits | Explains the permit process for double-parking on Paris streets |
| Insurance and Parquet | Addresses anxiety about floor and furniture protection |
| Sunday Availability | Confirms weekend scheduling and what that includes |
| Gardien and Building | Covers coordination with building staff and access logistics |
| Fixed Mobile call to action | Keeps the quote button pinned at the bottom of mobile screens |
Design & branding system
The visual identity follows a Service Utility theme. The palette is deliberately muted except for one high-contrast accent that signals action.
- Base colors: soft overcast white (#F4F5F7), Haussmann limestone (#D6CFC4), and deep moving-blanket navy (#1B2A4A) form the structural palette
- Signal orange (#E86A2A) appears exclusively on calls to action and price callouts, never decoratively
- Real crew photography replaces stock imagery; the staircase geometry is the primary visual credential
Mobile & speed optimization
The template is structured to perform clearly on small screens without requiring any additional configuration.
- The split-screen layout collapses to a single-column stacked view on mobile, keeping both halves readable
- The signal-orange call-to-action button fixes to the bottom of the mobile viewport so it is always one tap away
- No form fields on this page means there is nothing complex to load or render before the visitor can read
How this template helps you convert
The page is engineered as a click-through funnel. Every design and copy decision moves the visitor one step closer to tapping the quote button.
- The press mentions bar resolves trust before the visitor reads anything, which reduces the instinct to leave immediately
- Each FAQ section escalates a real anxiety and then resolves it with specific information, so the visitor arrives at the call to action already informed and ready
- The micro call-to-action links at the end of each FAQ answer create multiple conversion entry points without ever repeating the hard sell
Other information about this template
This template was designed with the Parisian rental market in mind. The FAQ content structure reflects the specific questions that come up repeatedly for movers working intra-muros.
- The template supports a click-through flow toward a separate, detailed quote form page not included in this template
- The header concept is built around a Press Mentions bar, which is particularly effective for service businesses that have earned media coverage or strong review platform ratings
- Businesses with verified ratings on platforms such as Google Reviews or Trustpilot will find the header bar layout ready to accommodate those logos and scores
- The template style is a 50/50 Split Screen, making it well suited for side-by-side content pairings like question-and-answer or before-and-after formats
- Creative direction follows a Transparent Process approach, meaning the page communicates openly about pricing, logistics, and policies rather than obscuring them behind a generic contact form




Theme
Corporate Precision
Creative direction
Transparent Process
Color system
Plum Executive
Style
Split Screen (50/50)
Direction
Booking/Scheduling
Page Sections
Split-screen FAQ Scroll Layout
Press Mentions Header Bar
Mobile-fixed Call-to-action Button
Micro Call-to-action System
No On-page Form Fields
Service Utility Color System
Related questions
Does this template include the quote form page?
Can I adapt the FAQ sections to different moving scenarios?
Is there a booking widget or form built into this page?
How does the mobile call-to-action button behave?
Can a moving company outside Paris use this template?