Templates
Professional Services
Post-Frame Builder (Pole Barn) Business
Truss - Authoritative Postframe Landing Page Template
Truss is an editorial magazine-style landing page built for post-frame construction companies. It combines cinematic split-hero photography, testimonial spreads styled like trade-magazine features, and a three-question scheduling form to turn site visitors into booked site visits. The layout earns trust the way a contractor's journal does: unhurried, authoritative, and built around real project stories.
by Rocket studio
Truss is a single-page template for post-frame builders who want to present their work with the authority of a trade publication. It leads with a dramatic split-hero, moves through three editorial testimonial spreads, and closes with a streamlined scheduling form. Every section is designed to earn confidence before asking for a commitment.
This template is built for post-frame and pole barn construction companies that serve rural and agricultural clients. If your business earns its reputation on job sites rather than in showrooms, Truss speaks your language.
Most construction websites look like generic service directories. They list capabilities without telling a story, and they ask for a quote before the visitor has any reason to trust the builder. Truss fixes that gap by leading with proof.
Truss delivers a fully structured, single-page layout that reads like a feature spread from a trade magazine. Every section has a defined job, from the split-hero that sets the scene to the scheduling form that closes the visit.




Theme
Editorial Magazine
Creative direction
Testimonial Mosaic
Color system
Navy Authority
Style
Editorial/Magazine
Direction
Booking/Scheduling
Page Sections
Split-hero Editorial Header
Testimonial Mosaic with Pull-quotes
Three-question Scheduling Form
Stats Bar with Project Numbers
Secondary Email Capture Path
Fixed Bottom Call-to-action Bar
What types of post-frame builders is this template designed for?
Can I use this template to capture leads beyond the scheduling form?
How does the three-question scheduling form work?
Is Truss a single-page layout or a multi-page website?
What makes this design feel different from a standard construction website?
The header uses a half-page photo and text composition. The left side holds a wide-angle photograph of a completed post-frame shop. The right side carries a large serif headline and a dateline-style subhead that treats the project like a feature story, not a sales pitch.
Three full editorial spreads each dedicate a two-page magazine layout to a single build. Each spread is anchored by an oversized pull-quote, client portrait zone, and project specification dateline. The builds featured are a calving barn, a small-engine shop, and a finished hobby woodworking space.
The scheduling section asks visitors three focused questions in sequence: building purpose from a select menu, approximate square footage via a slider from 1,200 to 10,000 square feet, and a preferred week for a site walkthrough using a calendar picker. It keeps the commitment threshold low while gathering the details a builder needs.
A four-metric stats bar sits between the hero and the first testimonial spread. It surfaces key project facts: speed, cost comparison, clearspan capability, and structure lifespan. These numbers do the early persuasion work so the testimonials can carry the story.
A "Download Our Build Guide" option sits alongside the primary scheduling call to action. It captures email addresses from visitors still in the research phase, giving them a low-commitment reason to stay connected until their napkin sketch becomes a real budget line.
After the second testimonial spread, a fixed bottom bar appears and stays visible as the visitor continues scrolling. It repeats the primary "Schedule Your Site Visit" prompt in safety-stake orange, keeping the conversion path visible without interrupting the editorial reading experience.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Split Hero | Establish authority with photo and editorial headline |
| Stats Bar | Deliver four concrete project performance numbers |
| Testimonial Spread 1 | Calving barn story with 11-day build dateline |
| Testimonial Spread 2 | Small-engine shop cost-per-square-foot comparison |
| Testimonial Spread 3 | Hobby woodworker finished rec building interior |
| Scheduling Form | Capture leads via three-question site visit request |
| Build Guide Download | Secondary email capture for research-phase visitors |
| Footer | Linear single-row footer with essential links |
Truss uses a Navy Authority color system paired with an editorial magazine typographic style. The palette and type choices are drawn directly from the visual language of trade print publications, giving the page a physical, ink-on-paper weight that digital-generic templates cannot replicate.
The template is designed desktop-first to deliver the full trade-magazine reading experience on large screens. It is built to respond across device sizes so that the same editorial authority carries through on smaller viewports.
Truss builds trust incrementally, the same way a well-edited magazine earns a reader's time. Each section moves the visitor one step closer to booking without feeling like a sales funnel.
Truss is part of a template collection built around the intersection of professional services and post-frame construction lead generation. It is purpose-built for the pole barn and post-frame builder niche, where trust and specificity matter more than flashy design trends.