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Steward - Trusted Vacationhome Landing Page Template
Steward is a vacation home property management landing page template built for companies that look after remote cabins, lakeside retreats, and coastal cottages on behalf of their owners. The split-screen layout, interactive map header, case-study narrative sections, and lead capture form work together to build trust and turn worried property owners into committed clients.
by Rocket studio
Steward is a single-page template designed for vacation home caretaking and property management services. It opens with an illustrated topographic map, unfolds three real-world case studies that escalate in stakes, and closes with a focused four-field lead capture form. The design feels grounded and trustworthy, built specifically for owners of remote second properties.
This template is built for property management companies that specialize in second homes and vacation properties. It speaks directly to the professionals, small firms, and independent caretakers who serve owners of lakeside cabins, mountain retreats, and coastal cottages.
Remote property owners often lie awake wondering whether the pipes froze, the thermostat held, or the cleaners showed up on time. A generic real estate website does not answer that specific anxiety. Steward solves the trust gap by showing, not just telling, what responsible oversight looks like.
You get a fully structured single-page layout that moves a visitor from curiosity to confidence to contact. Every section has a clear job, and the visual system reinforces calm authority from the first scroll to the final call to action.




Theme
Dark Immersive
Creative direction
Immersive Visual
Color system
Cloud Canvas
Style
Card Grid (Modular)
Direction
Click-Through
Page Sections
Interactive Topographic Map Header
Split-screen Section Layout
Escalating Case Study Narratives
Single-stat Divider Blocks
Four-field Lead Capture Form
Secondary Checklist Download Path
What type of business is this template designed for?
How many conversion paths does this template include?
Can I use this template if I manage properties in only one region?
What makes the case study format effective for this type of service?
What fields does the lead generation form include?
This template packs a focused set of purpose-built components. Each one earns its place by serving the visitor's trust journey and the company's lead generation goal.
The left panel of the header holds a softly illustrated topographic map with glowing amber pins marking managed properties. Pins pulse gently to suggest active presence. Hovering over a pin reveals the property type and season count, making the company's portfolio visible before any copy is read.
Every major section uses a 50/50 split-screen format. One side carries the visual evidence, the other carries the story. This structure keeps the page visually balanced while guiding the reader through each piece of information at a comfortable pace.
Three case study blocks tell the story of real properties and the problems they faced. Entries are formatted like dated captain's log entries, short and specific. Stakes escalate across the three stories, from a burst pipe caught early to a wildfire evacuation protocol executed under pressure.
Between case studies, full-width divider sections display a single key metric each. These stat blocks surface average emergency response time, total properties under management, and owner satisfaction percentage. They give scanning visitors a quick proof point without interrupting the narrative flow.
The primary call to action form appears after the second case study and asks only for property location by zip code, property type from a dropdown, visit frequency, and an email address. Keeping the form to four fields reduces friction for owners who are ready to commit.
A secondary conversion path offers a free downloadable seasonal closing checklist in exchange for just an email address. This captures owners who are not ready to hire but are already worried enough to want the resource, keeping them in the pipeline.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Split-screen header | Introduces the service with an animated topographic map and headline |
| Headline and subline | States the core promise and names the service regions |
| Case study one | Tells the story of a burst pipe caught by a routine winter check |
| Stat divider one | Shows a single key metric between case studies |
| Case study two | Covers a septic issue resolved before a family reunion |
| Primary call to action form | Captures qualified leads with a four-field property intake form |
| Case study three | Describes a wildfire evacuation protocol for a mountain property |
| Sticky call to action bar | Repeats the primary call to action after the third case study |
| Checklist download | Offers a free seasonal closing checklist for early-stage visitors |
The visual identity follows a Pastoral Calm theme grounded in a Midnight Blue color system. Every color choice connects to a feeling: the dock at dusk, a lit cabin window, fog lifting off a morning meadow. The palette is specific and intentional, never generic.
The template is structured with a mobile reading experience in mind. The split-screen layout adapts to stacked single-column sections on smaller screens so that case studies and the form remain easy to navigate without horizontal scrolling.
Steward is built around a deliberate persuasion arc. Every design and content decision moves the visitor one step closer to submitting the form or downloading the checklist.
This template is well-suited for vacation home property management companies operating across lake regions, mountain corridors, and coastal stretches. It is equally useful for independent caretakers looking to present their service professionally to a discerning audience of second-home owners.