Reference

Manufacturing web design glossary

The terms that come up when you build a website for a manufacturing or industrial business, defined in plain language.

RFQ (Request for Quote)
A buyer request for pricing on a specific part or job, usually with a drawing, quantity, and target date. For most manufacturers, the RFQ is the main conversion on the website, not a checkout.
Capabilities page
A page that describes one process you offer (machining, fabrication, finishing) with the specifics buyers screen on: equipment, envelope, tolerances, and materials.
Spec sheet / datasheet
A document listing a product or material's technical details. On a website, the data should appear as on-page HTML so search engines can read it, with the PDF as an optional download.
Tolerance
The allowable deviation from a specified dimension, such as plus or minus 0.0005 inch. Stating the tolerances you hold lets buyers self-qualify before they call.
Distributor / dealer locator
An interactive map or search that helps buyers find an authorized seller near them. Common for industrial companies that sell through channels.
Product configurator
A tool that lets a buyer choose options (size, material, finish) and get a valid product or price. Powerful but custom to your product line, so it adds build cost.
Faceted search
Search that lets buyers filter a catalog by attributes like material, size, or rating. Essential once a catalog passes a few hundred items.
Industrial SEO
Search optimization aimed at the specific terms engineers and buyers use: processes, materials, certifications, and part numbers, rather than broad consumer terms.
Core Web Vitals
Google's measures of page experience: loading (LCP), responsiveness (INP), and visual stability (CLS). They affect both rankings and conversions.
Schema / structured data
Code that describes your content to search engines, such as Organization, Product, or FAQ markup. It helps machines understand and surface your pages.
301 redirect
A permanent redirect from an old URL to a new one. Used during a redesign to carry search rankings and links forward so traffic does not reset.
Canonical URL
A tag that tells search engines the preferred version of a page, preventing duplicate-content problems when similar URLs exist.
Lead capture
The forms and calls to action that turn a visitor into a contact, such as a quote request or a newsletter signup.
CMS (Content Management System)
The software you use to edit your site's content. A good CMS lets your team update text, photos, and pages without a developer.
SSL certificate
The technology behind the padlock and https in your address bar. It encrypts traffic and is expected by buyers and required for good rankings. Included in every plan.
CAGE code
A unique identifier assigned to suppliers doing business with the US government. Defense and aerospace buyers often look for it when qualifying a vendor.