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All areas we serve
32 mi from HQTarrant CountySMB digital marketing

Web design, SEO and PPC for Fort Worth SMBs.

Where construction, energy services, and the western edge of DFW commerce all converge.

  • Census-grounded

    ACS, CBP & LEHD pulls

  • 60+ ICP cards

    Shipped, signed off

  • Outcome-locked

    One named outcome per sprint

  • No retainer trap

    Sprints, not rent

Who actually does the work

John Cravey, Founder
John
Pablo Novelo, Founder
Pablo
Josh Grounds, Dev
Josh
Danny Jackson, DOO
Danny
Dylan Evans, VP of Growth
Dylan
  • 32 mi

    From Dallas HQ

  • Tarrant County

    County

  • 7

    Neighborhoods we know

  • 6

    SMB verticals served

Inside the Fort Worth market

The local SMB landscape, the buyers, and how the city actually searches.

Family-owned construction companies, oil & gas services, ranch supply, and a tight downtown business district. Less crowded than Dallas; the brands that show up well on search win disproportionately.

Fort Worth is the construction and industrial-services anchor of DFW. The downtown core around Sundance Square is dense with professional services and hospitality, but the bulk of the SMB book sits in trades, energy services, and family-owned product businesses across Tarrant County.

We drive to Fort Worth from our Dallas office regularly — it’s 35 minutes on a clean I-30, longer in rush hour. Our Fort Worth clients tend to be operators who’ve been winning on word-of-mouth for a decade and finally need a digital presence that matches what they actually deliver in the field.

Notable neighborhoods + business districts

Where the Fort Worth SMBs are. Where we’ve done work.

Pins, not bullets. Hover a district to see what it tells us about the buyer.

Neighborhoods + districts

  • Sundance Square / Downtown
  • Cultural District
  • West 7th
  • Near Southside
  • TCU / Westcliff
  • Alliance
  • Stockyards

Landmarks in–market

  • Sundance Square
  • Fort Worth Stockyards
  • Kimbell Art Museum
  • Bass Performance Hall
  • TCU campus
  • Dickies Arena

Services we lead with here

What Fort Worth operators usually start with.

Each engagement is sized to the outcome you want. The angles below are the ones that map best to this market.

Sales-cycle calendar

The Fort Worth year, by buying window.

What we’re running, when, and why. Aim every engagement at the window where the spend actually compounds.

  1. Q1 · Budget reset

    Jan · Feb · Mar

    Q1 is the budget-reset window. Most Texas SMBs lock the year’s digital spend in January and February, and the brands without a fresh audience read end up funding the same channels that plateaued them last year. We do the read in the first six weeks of the year.

  2. Q2 · Spend ramp

    Apr · May · Jun

    Q2 is when paid spend ramps. School lets out, home-services demand peaks, B2B buyers commit before summer slowdown. Sequences need to be running clean by April or you’re leaving the spring on the table.

  3. Q3 · Fall planning

    Jul · Aug · Sep

    Q3 is the fall planning window. Whatever you’re going to ship for Q4 has to be scoped by Labor Day. We refresh the audience map in July and lock the Q4 push by mid-September.

  4. Q4 · Conversion push

    Oct · Nov · Dec

    Q4 is the conversion push. End-of-year buying compresses sales cycles by 30–40% in most categories. We retune the closing sequences in October and run them hot through December.

Why FH for Fort Worth

The case for working with us in this market.

Our flagship construction case study (BHR Construction Corp.) is a Tarrant County operator. We know the local construction landscape, the supplier network, and the search behavior of homeowners and GCs in this market — and we know what it takes to outrank the big national lead-aggregator sites that dominate the SERPs out here.

Respectful, openminded, professional, and extremely knowledgeable — these are the core attributes that have made my experience a positive one. They built our company a new website and since then have been diligently working on SEO initiatives. We’re already seeing favorable results! I highly recommend Frontend Horizon.
MMike Kearney, VP of Marketing — Best Barns

Fort Worth questions

The Fort Worth questions operators ask before they sign.

  • Do you serve clients in Tarrant County or only Dallas?
    Both. Fort Worth is 35 minutes from our office and we work with clients across Tarrant County — downtown, Alliance, the Cultural District, all of it.
  • Can you meet us in Fort Worth?
    Yes. We come to Tarrant County for kickoffs and quarterly reviews when in-person matters; day-to-day is remote.
  • How long does an SEO program take to show results in Fort Worth?
    Local map-pack movement usually shows inside 60–90 days. Organic ranking on competitive money keywords typically takes 4–6 months of steady work.
  • Which service should a Fort Worth business start with?
    For trades and construction operators it’s almost always the website plus local SEO — the two that decide whether a homeowner or GC finds you instead of an aggregator. PPC layers on when you need work booked this quarter.
  • Do you work with construction and trades specifically?
    Yes — it’s the core of our Tarrant County book. Our flagship construction case study (BHR Construction Corp.) is a Tarrant County operator, so we know the supplier network and how GCs and homeowners actually search here.
  • How do you beat the HomeAdvisor / Angi / Yelp aggregators that dominate the SERPs?
    We rebuild the site to rank for the real money keywords — city-specific, project-specific, intent-driven — instead of fighting aggregators on generic terms you’ll never win on volume.
  • How is a Fort Worth engagement priced?
    Sized to the outcome you want, not a rate card. Tarrant County CPCs run softer than Dallas, so a well-tuned budget here often beats a bigger Dallas spend on cost-per-booked-job. The first consultation is free.
  • Is there a long-term contract?
    No long lock-in. We re-earn the work every month. Most Fort Worth operators stay because the phone keeps ringing, not because a contract holds them.
  • Do you serve the Alliance corridor and the Stockyards, or just downtown?
    All of it — downtown around Sundance Square, the Cultural District, Alliance, the Near Southside, and out to the perimeter trades. We treat Tarrant County as one connected market.
  • Who actually does the work on my account?
    An FH strategist plus our in-house build team, with a direct line to the lead strategist. The same person stays on your account for the life of the engagement.
  • What number do you report against?
    Booked jobs and the revenue they produced — not clicks or ranking screenshots. Every Fort Worth engagement reports against the work it actually generated.
  • What does the free discovery include?
    A read on who’s searching for your services across Tarrant County, where your competitors are weak, and a build plan keyed to Fort Worth. Run it from the estimate on this page in about eight minutes.

How we run the engagement

Pricing, cadence, and the number we report against.

  1. Pricing

    Sized to the engagement, not the bill rate.

    Tell us the outcome you want; we send back the scope and the number that lands it. Free consultation first, no card, no commitment.

  2. Cadence

    Weekly progress, monthly reporting.

    You see the work as it ships, not just at month’s end. Most Fort Worth clients have a direct text line into the lead strategist on the account.

  3. Outcome lock

    Booked-revenue reporting, every quarter.

    Every Fort Worth engagement reports against the same number: leads that closed, revenue that booked. Not vanity metrics from a platform dashboard.

Free estimate for Fort Worth

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Other areas we serve

Other Texas markets, plus nationwide remote.

Ready to scope a Fort Worth engagement?

Run discovery and we’ll send back the market analysis, the ICP cards, and a build plan keyed to Fort Worth, before any sales call.