Dog owners are picky, and rightly so. A simple website lets them see your work, check your prices, and book a slot without a phone call. That's the win: fewer "how much?" messages, more booked diaries.
Quick answer
A dog groomer's website should list services and prices clearly, make booking or enquiring easy, show photos of freshly groomed dogs (they sell better than any text), state the area you cover, and include reviews from happy owners.
When someone's deciding who grooms their dog, they want answers to a handful of small but very real questions before they ever message you.
Owners come for the photos and stay for the booking. Build the site around that.
Instagram-style grid of your best work. Owners scroll this first, every time.
Small / medium / large dog, or breed-specific. Add-ons like nail clip, teeth, de-shed.
Map + a sentence about where to park and how to drop off.
A booking tool if you use one, or a short request form that lands in your inbox or WhatsApp.
A few honest Google or Facebook reviews, pick ones that mention the dog by name.
A photo and a paragraph. Owners want to know who's actually handling their dog.
A simple enquiry form or WhatsApp link is plenty to start. If you're juggling lots of slots and want self-service, we can add a booking tool later.
Yes, even a "from £X" range. It filters out the wrong enquiries and tells the right people you're for them.
Instagram is great for photos, but it's terrible at "where are you, how much, how do I book?" A simple website answers those in one tap and keeps your work findable on Google.
About a week. Send across a few groom photos and your prices and the rest gets handled.
Send across a few of your favourite groom photos and your prices, I'll put together a free example so you can see how it would look. No obligation.
Ask for a free example websiteOr message me on WhatsApp · 07769 028475