Category relevance
Clinics
Common needs
Clinics usually need a calmer way to build trust, explain services clearly, and make inquiries or bookings easier on mobile.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Industry exploration
Different business categories can use some of the same service families, but the priorities, proof needs, and next steps are rarely identical. This page helps you understand where your category fits, what usually matters first, and which BuildOS path is most likely to make sense.
Start here to judge relevance. Demo Lab goes deeper on proof, while solutions, pricing, and discovery help you act once the fit is clearer.
How to use this page
Start by finding the category that feels closest to your business. From there, this page helps you understand what usually matters, what may fit best, and which next route makes the most sense.
Step 1
Choose the business category that is closest to your business today. This page starts with category relevance, not with a full service list.
Step 2
Use the category view to understand common pains, growth needs, and the service families that are often the closest fit.
Step 3
Once the fit is clearer, move into solutions for depth, Demo Lab for proof, pricing for simpler work, or discovery for custom needs.
Start with the business category that feels most like your own. This is the entry point for understanding relevance before you go deeper into proof, service families, pricing, or discovery.
These featured cards are here to make the industry index genuinely useful. Use them to compare common pains, likely service-family matches, and the next route that often makes sense first.
Category relevance
Common needs
Clinics usually need a calmer way to build trust, explain services clearly, and make inquiries or bookings easier on mobile.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Category relevance
Common needs
Restaurants usually need menus and offers that are easier to scan, along with reservation or ordering paths that lead faster to action.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Category relevance
Common needs
Consultants often need stronger positioning, clearer service packaging, and a more confident lead path for the right kind of client.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Category relevance
Common needs
Educators often need programs explained more clearly, stronger trust signals, and a simpler route into inquiries, sessions, or enrollment.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Category relevance
Common needs
Real-estate operators usually need stronger presentation, clearer inquiry handling, and a more credible digital experience for projects or services.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Category relevance
Common needs
Manufacturers often need clearer company and capability presentation, better inquiry readiness, and stronger visibility around what the business can deliver.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Category relevance
Common needs
Local service businesses usually need stronger discoverability, clearer service explanation, and faster trust-building that leads to inquiries.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
Category relevance
Common needs
Startup founders usually need MVP clarity, staged decision support, and a realistic path into discovery before custom workflows are scoped.
Likely service-family matches
Likely next path
The same category can contain both simpler and more complex digital needs. Industry fit helps you judge relevance, but the real next step still depends on how repeatable or custom the need is.
These are common category needs with lower ambiguity. They are often easier to describe publicly because the business goal is clearer and the delivery path is more repeatable.
Common category examples
Likely next step
Go to Pricing BuilderThese needs are common, but the right path depends on how the business operates. They may still start from a known pattern, but the details can vary enough that comparing routes first is useful.
Common category examples
Likely next step
Review matching solutions firstThese needs usually sound less like a simpler public-facing build and more like software, portals, automation, or staged product planning. They need discussion before scope becomes clear.
Common category examples
Likely next step
Start discoveryIndustry exploration helps you understand business fit. The next step is usually to review the service family that best matches the needs you recognized here.
Use these matches as routing hints, not as a second catalog. `/solutions` stays the canonical service-family index when you want the full structure.
These families are often the first place to look when the main need is better trust, clearer presentation, customer action, or stronger visibility.
Often the starting point for clinics, consultants, educators, manufacturers, real-estate teams, and local services.
Relevant when customers need to book, reserve, order, or request instead of only reading about the offer.
Useful when discoverability, local search, and clearer performance signals matter after the core site is in place.
These families often appear when a business already has a base presence and now needs cleaner conversion paths, repeat improvements, or a stronger customer or staff experience.
Useful when an existing experience needs better structure, clarity, or conversion before a bigger rebuild.
Useful when recurring updates, service requests, or operational cleanup matter after launch.
Relevant when repeat-use customer or staff workflows need a dedicated mobile experience.
When the need starts sounding like software, roles, workflows, or product planning, these are usually the right service families to explore next.
Relevant for dashboards, portals, custom roles, operational workflows, and business-specific logic.
Relevant when the right path is still unclear and you need scope, direction, and staged planning first.
Industry exploration helps you decide whether a category feels relevant. Demo Lab is the next place to go when you want example direction, proof-oriented ideas, and more confidence before choosing pricing or discovery.
What Demo Lab helps validate
Demo Lab is there to help you review illustrative examples and category-aware direction after the business fit becomes clearer. It should build confidence without pretending every category already has a finished exact demo waiting for it.
Use this handoff when you want to move from “this sounds like my business” to “show me example direction that helps me judge the next step.”
Category fit does not automatically mean public pricing fits. Use pricing for simpler, repeatable starting needs, and use discovery when the requirement depends on workflow, roles, integrations, or more custom logic.
Pricing Builder is usually the better next step when the requirement sounds structured, lower-ambiguity, and close to a known starting package.
Common examples
Discovery is the better next step when the need sounds more custom, operational, or dependent on roles, integrations, staging, or business-specific logic.
Common examples
If the service-family direction still feels unclear, explore service families first.