Florist
Take same-day orders online instead of over a phone that's always busy on Valentine's Day.
What's included, and why
- ✓Bouquet catalogue with online ordering
Flower orders are impulse and occasion-driven — if someone can't order at 10pm for tomorrow, they order from the florist who lets them.
- ✓Delivery-date picker and delivery-area check
The #1 back-and-forth in flower orders is 'can you get it there by Friday' — answering it at checkout saves both sides the call.
- ✓Occasion reminders (Mother's Day, Valentine's)
Your busiest days are predictable — an email a week before turns last year's customers into this year's orders.
Priced between a catalogue site and full e-commerce — you get real online ordering with delivery logic, without the full inventory system a big store needs.
How should it look?
The same florist website can be built in very different directions — and the difference isn't just looks, the machinery behind each one differs too. These are the directions that tend to win for businesses like yours:
- Big Photo First
One stunning full-screen photo, a few confident words, one button.
- Straight to the Point
The menu, the prices, the hours — before anything else.
- Dark & Expensive
Dark background, gold or ivory details, slow and confident.
- Loud Words, No Photos Needed
Huge type does the talking — great when photography isn't your strength.
- Half Story, Half Action
Photo on one side, booking or enquiry on the other — always visible.
- The Work Speaks
A wall of your work, tightly organised — portfolio as homepage.
Not quite right? Tell us what you actually need and we'll write back with a price.
Offices and regulars who buy weekly are worth far more on a subscription than re-ordering by phone each time.
Wedding work is your highest-margin job — a dedicated enquiry form with date and budget captures it properly.