Service area · 10 minutes from my desk in Brooklyn
Websites and local marketing for Danielson & Killingly businesses
Not a pin on a coverage map.
Danielson is the kind of Main Street that still works. Danielson Surplus Sales has been selling work boots and work clothes on that strip for going on fifty years. Pourings & Passages pulls used-book people in from out of state. New York Pizza Co. and Pizza Pizzazz split the local pizza arguments about evenly. Davis Park, the little triangle where Main, Reynolds, and Broad meet, has anchored the borough since 1890, and the streets around it still look like the mill town they were. About 4,200 people live in the borough itself; the rest of Killingly’s 17,752 spread out from there through Dayville, East Killingly, and the hills in between.
The work, though, is bigger than the borough. Route 12 and Route 6 cross right here, and I-395 runs up the middle of town. In Dayville you’ve got Killingly Commons at 395 and Route 101 (Target, Lowe’s, Stop & Shop) and an industrial park that’s been effectively full for years: Frito-Lay, Spirol, the UNFI distribution center. That’s a lot of rooftops, a lot of trucks, and a lot of service calls. Killingly is where the Quiet Corner goes to buy things, which means a plumber, electrician, or HVAC outfit here can stay booked without ever crossing a town line.
Here’s what I notice when I search “plumber Danielson CT” or “electrician Killingly” the way a homeowner would: a surprising number of the businesses that come up have no website at all, and plenty of the rest have one that hasn’t been touched since it went up. Google listings with old hours, no photos, a handful of reviews. That’s not a knock. You’re busy doing the actual work. But it means the first Killingly business that takes its listing and its website seriously starts winning those searches almost by default.
I’m ten minutes away, down Route 6 from Brooklyn. This isn’t a territory on somebody’s coverage map. It’s the town where I get my pizza. If you run a trade or a shop anywhere in Killingly, I’ll come to you, look at what you’ve got, and tell you plainly what’s worth fixing and what isn’t.
Three plain offers. Same published prices in every town.
Website + Care
$3,500 + $149/mo
A fast, plain-spoken site built for your trade. Then I keep it running: hosting, edits, backups, your Google profile.
See what's included →Growth
$399/mo
Show up when someone nearby searches your trade. Local SEO, review requests that actually go out, missed-call text-back.
See what's included →AI Front Desk
+$249/mo
An answering assistant that picks up 24/7, takes the message, books the job, and texts you the details.
See what's included →No Danielson & Killingly numbers yet. Here's the deal instead.
The founder deal: first 3 businesses
Half-price build, $1,750 instead of $3,500, in exchange for letting me publish your before-and-after numbers. Calls, bookings, where you rank. A Danielson & Killingly case study would sit right in this spot.
Claim a founder slotStraight answers for Danielson & Killingly
Do you actually come out to Danielson?
Yes. I'm in Brooklyn, ten minutes down Route 6. First meeting is at your shop or over coffee on Main Street, whichever is easier. I don't do sales presentations; I look at what you have and tell you what I'd do with it.
Who else do you work with in Killingly?
Honest answer: the business is new in 2026, so the client list is short. That's why the first three clients get a half-price build, $1,750 instead of $3,500, in exchange for letting me publish their real before-and-after numbers. When a Killingly job ships, it goes on this page.
What does a website cost for a Killingly plumber?
$3,500 for the build (five to eight pages, written for your trade), plus $149/month for Care, which covers hosting, edits, backups, and keeping your Google Business Profile current. Same figure as the pricing page, because there's only one price.
Fifteen minutes on the phone. Danielson & Killingly is 10 minutes from my desk in Brooklyn.
No pitch deck, no follow-up sequence if you say no.