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Most machine shop websites suck. Not because they look bad. Because they don't understand how manufacturing buyers actually think.
In this episode of Raw Material, I sat down with Mark Manuel, better known as "The Industrial Ambassador," and we got into something that honestly doesn't get talked about enough in this industry: most manufacturers are marketing themselves completely wrong. Shops spend a pile of money on websites, SEO, social media, videos, branding, all this stuff… and then sit there wondering why the RFQs never come in.
Meanwhile, Mark built a seven-page "ugly website" that generated millions of dollars in business because he understood one thing most people miss: buyers don't search for what you do. They search for the problem they need solved.
That one idea turns into a much bigger conversation throughout this episode. We talked about how engineers actually search online, why most shops accidentally pigeonhole themselves, why trust still matters more than marketing tactics, and why younger buyers behave completely differently than the older generation running most manufacturing companies today.
We also got into AI, trade shows, sales psychology, and why social media is mostly a distraction for small manufacturers trying to grow. Mark's perspective is different because he's not some generic marketing guy trying to sell machine shops on buzzwords. He's spent years walking factory floors, talking to owners, going to trade shows, studying buyer behavior, and figuring out what actually moves the needle in this industry.
And honestly, we covered so much ground that this ended up becoming a two-part conversation. This first episode lays the foundation around marketing, buyer psychology, trust, and how manufacturers need to rethink the way they present themselves online. In Part 2, we go even deeper into AI, data, the future of industrial sales, and where all of this is heading next.
SegmentsSubscribe on Apple and Spotify
By Jamie MarzilliMost machine shop websites suck. Not because they look bad. Because they don't understand how manufacturing buyers actually think.
In this episode of Raw Material, I sat down with Mark Manuel, better known as "The Industrial Ambassador," and we got into something that honestly doesn't get talked about enough in this industry: most manufacturers are marketing themselves completely wrong. Shops spend a pile of money on websites, SEO, social media, videos, branding, all this stuff… and then sit there wondering why the RFQs never come in.
Meanwhile, Mark built a seven-page "ugly website" that generated millions of dollars in business because he understood one thing most people miss: buyers don't search for what you do. They search for the problem they need solved.
That one idea turns into a much bigger conversation throughout this episode. We talked about how engineers actually search online, why most shops accidentally pigeonhole themselves, why trust still matters more than marketing tactics, and why younger buyers behave completely differently than the older generation running most manufacturing companies today.
We also got into AI, trade shows, sales psychology, and why social media is mostly a distraction for small manufacturers trying to grow. Mark's perspective is different because he's not some generic marketing guy trying to sell machine shops on buzzwords. He's spent years walking factory floors, talking to owners, going to trade shows, studying buyer behavior, and figuring out what actually moves the needle in this industry.
And honestly, we covered so much ground that this ended up becoming a two-part conversation. This first episode lays the foundation around marketing, buyer psychology, trust, and how manufacturers need to rethink the way they present themselves online. In Part 2, we go even deeper into AI, data, the future of industrial sales, and where all of this is heading next.
SegmentsSubscribe on Apple and Spotify