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In the current wave of digital transformation sweeping across industries, having a corporate website is no longer simply about “having an official site.” Recently, Youyoucao E-Yu, a company with years of experience in regional digital services, announced the official launch of its new “Enterprise Website Building · Precision Empowerment” strategy. This initiative aims to help small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the E-Yu region (Hubei and Chongqing) quickly build digital storefronts with marketing conversion capabilities through lighter and more intelligent website-building tools.
According to a relevant person in charge at Youyoucao E-Yu, the core of this strategic upgrade lies in the combination of “de-templateization” and “scenario-based” approaches. In the past, many website-building service providers offered templates that were often generic and failed to truly match the business logic of different industries. Leveraging its three years of service experience in Hubei and Chongqing, Youyoucao E-Yu has developed multiple deeply customized website-building solutions for high-frequency demand industries such as manufacturing, restaurant chains, and local life services. For example, for hotpot chain brands in Chongqing, the system integrates online queuing, branch navigation, and membership point interfaces; for agricultural e-commerce in Hubei, it strengthens traceability displays and one-click distribution functions.
“We are not just building websites; we are building online business hubs for enterprises,” said the head of the technical team at Youyoucao E-Yu. Under the new strategy, the enterprise website-building service will connect the entire chain from traffic acquisition to customer retention. Users can synchronously build official websites, mini-programs, and H5 pages through simple drag-and-drop operations, with backend data directly interfacing with mainstream enterprise WeChat and CRM systems. This “build-to-operate” approach significantly reduces the cost of trial and error for SMEs.
Notably, Youyoucao E-Yu has also launched a special “Localized Operation and Maintenance Guarantee Plan.” In response to the common pain point among E-Yu enterprises that “websites are left unattended after construction and content updates lag,” the company has set up dedicated operation and maintenance centers in Yubei, Chongqing, and Optics Valley, Wuhan, providing 7×12-hour manual response services. A businessman who has run a building materials business in Chongqing for ten years told reporters that previously, websites built by outsourcing companies were left untouched for half a year. Now, Youyoucao E-Yu’s operation and maintenance staff regularly take the initiative to contact him to update product catalogs and promotional information. “It feels like the website has truly come alive,” he said.
From an industry perspective, Youyoucao E-Yu’s move reflects the transformation of the enterprise website-building market from “extensive construction” to “refined operations.” According to an industry report by iResearch, the scale of China’s enterprise website-building market exceeded 80 billion yuan in 2024, but customer satisfaction has declined for three consecutive years, mainly due to service providers prioritizing sales over delivery. By choosing this time to deepen its regional focus and rebuild trust through “localized services + scenario-based products,” Youyoucao E-Yu has undoubtedly hit the real pain points of the market.
Currently, Youyoucao E-Yu’s new enterprise website-building strategy has been first implemented in core cities such as Chongqing, Wuhan, Yichang, and Xiangyang, with the first batch of partner companies exceeding 200. According to sources, their next step is to embed AI content generation functions into the website-building system, allowing business owners to simply input keywords, and the system will automatically generate copy and images that align with the brand’s tone. This may indicate that the next competitive frontier in enterprise website building will no longer be “who builds faster,” but “who can truly help enterprises use it and make money.”