A brochure answers one question: what do you do? A revenue platform answers a different one: why should I request a quote from you, today, over anyone else?
Most manufacturer websites were built for the first question. They show a product range. They list capabilities and certifications. They have an "About Us" page with a photo of the founding director. And they sit there, generating traffic that mostly bounces, from buyers who don't find what they need and quietly move to a competitor who does.
"By the time a buyer contacts a supplier, they've already completed 16 digital touchpoints. Most manufacturers only show up at touchpoint 16."
The manufacturing buyer's journey is long. Complex. Multi-stakeholder. A Plant Manager, an Engineering Director and a Procurement lead all have different objections at different stages, and they're all doing their own research independently before a shortlist even forms.
If your website doesn't speak to each of them, at their specific stage of that journey, you're not in the running.
The manufacturers winning new business digitally have made a structural shift. They've stopped treating their website as a cost of doing business and started treating it as their most productive sales asset.
Practically, this means:
The gap isn't awareness. Most manufacturing MDs know their website could work harder. The gap is structural: the agency that built the site didn't understand the buyer, the sales cycle or what "conversion" actually means in a 6-12 month B2B manufacturing context.
They built something that looks acceptable. They handed it over. And they moved on.
A website that generates qualified enquiries in manufacturing isn't an aesthetic exercise. It's a commercial system, built around the way your specific buyers research, compare and decide. That requires sector knowledge, CRO expertise and a genuine connection to your sales pipeline. Most generalist agencies have none of the three.
"Your website, your search visibility and your content are doing most of the selling, whether you realise it or not."
Pull your last 10 qualified enquiries. For each one, map exactly how that buyer found you: what they searched, what page they landed on, what content they engaged with before getting in touch.
If you can't answer that question, your website isn't a revenue engine. It's a brochure with a contact form. And the manufacturers who can answer it are systematically outperforming you for every buyer who doesn't already know your name.