Team Madcraft

Most heavy machinery companies are running the same playbook they used in 2015. Trade shows. Cold calls. A website that hasn’t been touched since the last equipment refresh. And it worked until it didn’t.
Let’s be clear about something. The fleet manager sourcing a new excavator fleet isn’t waiting for your next trade show appearance. He’s on Google at 10pm, comparing specs, checking your case studies, and deciding whether your company looks credible enough to put on a shortlist.
If you’re not showing up during that research window, you don’t exist.
That’s not an exaggeration. It’s just how industrial procurement works now. The sales conversation still happens. But the shortlist gets built online, weeks before anyone picks up the phone.
Here’s what usually happens. A machinery company hires a generalist digital agency. The agency runs some Google Ads, posts on LinkedIn three times a week, and sends a monthly report full of impressions and clicks. Six months later, the sales team hasn’t noticed a single new lead from it.
The problem isn’t digital marketing. It’s that generalist agencies don’t know the difference between a Tier 4 engine emissions requirement and a standard diesel spec. They don’t understand why a procurement director at a mining operation has completely different concerns than a rental fleet manager sourcing compact track loaders.
Industrial B2B is a different game. The keywords are technical. The buyers are skeptical. The deal sizes are large. You need a strategy built for that reality, not a recycled e-commerce playbook.
Many marketing managers focus solely on the quantity of leads. However, if your sales team is constantly frustrated by low quality inquiries, your website is failing its primary job. It should educate the prospect and qualify them before they ever reach out to your team.
Working with an experienced web design company allows you to refine your conversion paths. If your site is too vague, you will attract price shoppers and individuals who are a poor fit for your services. By utilizing strategic content and clear service definitions, you can ensure that the leads hitting your CRM are high intent and ready to buy. Your website should be a silent salesperson that handles the initial vetting process for you.
Your customers don’t search “heavy machinery.” They search “hydraulic excavator hire Texas” or “Tier 4 compliant crane supplier Gulf Coast.” Those are the terms your website needs to rank for.
Get your core service and product pages built around specific equipment types, applications, and locations. If you serve Houston, Dallas, and Oklahoma City, those markets need their own pages, not a single generic “Service Areas” paragraph buried in your footer.
It takes time. Three to six months before you see meaningful movement. But SEO leads are different from any other channel. The person found you while looking for exactly what you sell. That’s a warm lead before the first conversation.
SEO is long-term. Google Ads fills the gap right now.
The key is not to run them like a consumer campaign. Narrow the targeting hard. Exact match on specific equipment terms. A negative keyword list that eliminates job seekers, students, and researchers who will never buy yellow iron. Landing pages that show specs, certifications, and a direct path to a quote request not a generic homepage.
Done right, Google Ads puts you in front of buyers who are actively searching this week. Combined with SEO, you’re covering both the short game and the long one.
LinkedIn’s value for heavy machinery companies isn’t organic posts. It’s the ability to target procurement managers, plant directors, and operations VPs at specific companies by job title and industry.
That precision matters when your average deal is worth $200,000. You don’t need 10,000 impressions from the wrong people. You need 400 impressions from the right ones.
Run LinkedIn ads that speak directly to the operational problems your buyers are dealing with. Downtime costs. Equipment reliability. Compliance headaches. Keep the creative simple and the offer specific. A spec sheet download, a case study, a consultation. Not a “Learn More” button that goes nowhere.
Your buyers are doing technical research. Give them the answers.
Write content around the questions your sales team gets asked repeatedly. “What’s the maintenance schedule on a 50-tonne excavator?” “What certifications should I look for in a crane rental company?” “How do Tier 4 Final emission standards affect equipment procurement?”
This kind of content builds trust with serious buyers and filters out tire-kickers. It also tells Google your site is authoritative in this space, which compounds your SEO results over time.
You can run perfect ads and rank well on Google. If buyers land on your website and it looks like it was built in 2017, you’ve already lost them.
Think about it from the buyer’s side. They’re evaluating a vendor for a $500,000 equipment contract. They hit your site and the photos are low-resolution, the spec sheets are buried, and the mobile version is broken. That’s all the signal they need to move on to a competitor.
Your website isn’t a brochure. It’s your best salesperson. It needs to load fast, show the right credentials, surface your case studies, and make it easy to request a quote or download specs.
Fix the website before you spend another dollar on ads.
Heavy equipment sales cycles are long. You won’t see closed revenue in 30 days. That doesn’t mean you can’t measure what’s working.
Track these numbers instead:
If your CRM isn’t connected to your website analytics, you’re flying blind. That integration isn’t optional. It’s the only way to know which marketing spend is actually producing pipeline.
SEO delivers the highest-quality leads because it captures buyers actively researching specific equipment. Madcraft builds search strategies specifically for industrial and heavy equipment companies.
Google Ads can generate inquiries within two weeks. SEO takes three to six months. Running both at the same time covers short-term pipeline and long-term visibility. Madcraft manages both for industrial clients.
Yes. LinkedIn lets you target fleet managers, plant directors, and procurement leads directly by job title. Madcraft runs LinkedIn campaigns for industrial B2B clients targeting specific buyer personas.
It’s a conversion problem, not a traffic problem. Weak product pages, slow load times, and no case studies all kill leads. Madcraft’s conversion audits identify exactly where visitors are dropping off.
Track pipeline contribution, not closed revenue. Connect your CRM to your website analytics so leads are attributed correctly from first click to contract. Madcraft sets this up as part of every engagement.