Websites for Water Supply Companies

A water supply company website should give residents and businesses clear access to outage notices, planned works, water quality information and account services. When information is hard to find or slow to update, complaints increase and trust falls. We design websites that support timely communication, accessible self-service and reliable public information.

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Outage updates · accessible self-service · clear water quality information · compliant delivery

What are the benefits?

For water supply companies, the website is a core service channel, not just a corporate presence. People rely on it for interruption notices, billing tasks, water quality updates and contact routes during urgent situations. The site must therefore be easy to use, accessible, mobile-friendly and structured to support GDPR requirements, multilingual content and integration with existing customer systems.

Residents need to know quickly about planned works, emergency repairs and affected areas. If notices are delayed, unclear or difficult to locate, people cannot prepare properly and service teams face avoidable calls and complaints.

When customers have to move between separate pages or unclear forms, they are more likely to submit incorrect readings, miss payment steps or abandon the task altogether. This creates extra work for customer service and slows routine account management.

Water quality data is often published in formats that meet technical requirements but do not help residents understand what the figures mean. Without plain explanations, routine reporting can still leave people uncertain about safety, standards and local conditions.

If the site is difficult to navigate, weak on mobile devices or not built for assistive technologies, some residents cannot complete essential tasks independently. This is a service issue as well as a compliance risk for public bodies and regulated providers.

Service interruption notices and area updates

We structure outage and works information so residents can quickly see what is happening, where it applies, when it starts and what action they may need to take. Content can be organised by location, service area and update status to support fast publishing during planned and unplanned events.

Integrated customer account journeys

We design clear routes for meter readings, invoices, payments and account updates, connecting the website with existing customer systems where needed. The result is a simpler process for users and fewer avoidable support requests for staff.

Plain-language water quality pages

We present water quality results in a way that is understandable to non-specialists, with short explanations of key indicators, local context and links to formal reports. This helps organisations meet information duties while making technical data more useful to the public.

Accessibility and multilingual content design

We build websites to support accessible navigation, readable content, keyboard use, clear page structure and multilingual publishing where required. This helps water supply companies serve diverse communities and align with public sector accessibility expectations.

Ongoing support, governance and reporting

We provide structured maintenance and review processes covering performance, accessibility, security and content governance. This gives organisations a clear record of what has been checked, what needs attention and how the website is performing over time.

FAQ

The website should provide a clearly signposted area for planned works, emergency repairs and service interruptions. Notices should show affected locations, expected timings and the latest update so residents can act on reliable information.

Customers should be able to reach meter reading submission from the main navigation or account area without unnecessary steps. The process should be simple, mobile-friendly and connected to the relevant customer system so submissions are recorded accurately.

Not entirely, because service areas, operational processes, customer systems and reporting obligations differ between organisations. However, the core needs are usually similar: clear disruption notices, accessible self-service, understandable public information and reliable governance.

The water supply company must own the domain and hosting, with invoices issued by the direct service provider.

Do you want residents to access real-time information and manage services independently?

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