Prepared by V360HQ · Confidential to JPR Combustions Ltd

Digital Infrastructure
& New Era Plan

A strategic report for JPR Combustions Ltd — covering the full digital, marketing, and operational opportunity available to the business right now, and the infrastructure required to capture it.

JPR Combustions Ltd
V360HQ Strategy
June 2026
1.0 — For Review
01 — Executive Summary

JPR Combustions is a technically excellent business. The systems around it haven't kept up.

Twenty-five years of operational credibility, Gas Safe and Worcester Bosch accreditation, a loyal client base, and a team of five skilled engineers. The engineering side is not the problem. The problem is that everything surrounding it — the website, the marketing, the customer journey, the internal workflows — is running at 2018 standards in 2026.

That gap is not a cosmetic issue. It costs real money every month in missed enquiries, leads that go to competitors with a more modern digital presence, quotes that don't convert because the follow-up is manual and slow, and admin hours that could be recovered and redeployed.7

This report sets out what closing that gap is worth to JPR financially, what it would cost to do it through conventional agencies and developers, and what the V360HQ plan delivers — in three phases, starting with immediate visible wins.

The headline opportunity: Closing the digital and operational gap represents an estimated £100,000–£250,000 in recoverable annual value for a business of JPR's size — through a combination of revenue capture (more enquiries converting, less work going to competitors), recovered admin time, and operational efficiency. The infrastructure to deliver this is already largely in place via JPR's existing BigChange subscription. It primarily needs to be activated and connected.

25+ Years of operational track record
5 Engineers on the ground
~400 Jobs completed per month
3 phases To a fully modern, future-ready operation

Honest findings. None of this is permanent — but all of it costs money while it stands.

The following reflects a direct audit of JPR's current digital posture — what a prospective customer, commercial client, or procurement team sees when they look for JPR Combustions online.

Critical

Testimonials page: live database error

The /testimonials page is throwing a public SQL crash message where reviews should be. Every customer who lands there sees a technical error. This should be fixed or taken down immediately, regardless of the wider project.

Critical

Dead social links

The website links to Google Plus (shut down in 2019) and a YouTube channel belonging to Worcester Bosch — not JPR. Both actively undermine trust at the point a customer is trying to learn more.

High

Website: stale and incomplete

Content references outdated information. Powrmatic is misspelled on a key accreditation page. There are unfixed editor's notes visible on the live site. The overall design does not reflect the scale or quality of the business behind it.

High

No online booking or enquiry integration

Every enquiry currently goes through a phone call or email. There is no mechanism for a customer to raise a fault, book a service, or request a quote outside of business hours. Jobs that don't get called in, don't get booked.

High

Google reviews: under-indexed for the business size

JPR's review count does not reflect 25 years of completed work. Commercial procurement teams regularly filter by review volume before shortlisting.4 Without a systematic review-request process, the count stays low while competitors grow theirs.

High

No commercial capability materials

No current capability statement, no commercial services PDF, no case study library. When a facilities manager or housing association procurement team asks for documentation, there is nothing to send. These deals go to firms who have the paperwork ready.

Medium

No systematic social presence

JPR has done the work for 25 years. None of it is visible online in a way that builds ongoing brand trust or generates inbound leads. Competitors are actively building audiences with job photography, team posts, and seasonal content.

Medium

Manual admin creating hidden cost

Job sheets, customer follow-ups, quote preparation, certificate tracking — all manual. With BigChange already in use, the infrastructure to automate significant portions of this exists. It hasn't been fully activated.

The compounding risk: Each of these items individually is manageable. Together, they present a picture to the outside world that does not match the quality of the business. A commercial client doing due diligence, or a new customer choosing between JPR and a competitor with a modern website and 150 Google reviews, makes a snap judgment. JPR loses that judgment more often than it should.

03 — What Competitors Are Doing

The benchmark. This is what JPR is measured against whether it chooses to be or not.

The Isle of Wight heating and gas services market has clear ceiling competitors. What they're doing sets the bar that every prospective client compares JPR against — consciously or not.

Wight Heating
Primary digital competitor
The most important competitor to watch. Their marketing is sharper than their size would suggest. They are actively building the commercial-search front door — better-optimised Google presence, more consistent social output, cleaner website. In the absence of JPR closing the gap, Wight Heating will continue to capture the first click from new commercial and domestic prospects searching online.
F W Marsh
Multi-trade ceiling competitor
F W Marsh sets the ceiling for what a full-scale multi-trade firm on the Island looks like. Well-resourced, established commercial relationships. Direct head-on competition is not the play — but they define the standard that commercial procurement expects, and JPR needs commercial documentation and digital posture that demonstrates it belongs in the same conversation.
Mainland firms
Emerging threat for larger contracts
For larger commercial, NHS, or housing association contracts, procurement teams will consider mainland firms willing to service the Island if the local alternative can't demonstrate credibility at the right level. A strong capability statement, commercial case studies, and a professional digital presence are the gatekeeping criteria. JPR currently has none of these in readily deliverable form.

The honest read: JPR's engineering capability is equal to or better than its competitors. The gap is entirely in how that capability is presented, marketed, and made accessible to new customers. That is a fixable problem — and fixing it is the entire point of this plan.

What tightening this up is worth annually.

These are conservative estimates based on JPR's profile — five engineers, approximately 400 jobs per month, a mixed domestic, landlord, and commercial portfolio. Each figure represents value that exists today but isn't being captured.

Revenue source How it's recovered Annual value (conservative)
Online enquiries currently missed Out-of-hours fault reporting, online booking, website contact form connected to BigChange £15,000–£35,000
Quotes not followed up / lost to slow response Automated quote follow-up workflow; faster quote turnaround via AI drafting £20,000–£50,000
Annual service revenue not being systematically renewed Automated service reminder programme via BigChange; service plan subscription layer £25,000–£60,000
Commercial contracts lost to better-presented competitors Capability statement, case study library, commercial PDF — materials that win the shortlist £20,000–£60,000
Admin hours recovered and redeployed Estimated 3–6 hours per engineer per week recovered via workflow automation across 5 engineers £20,000–£45,000
Total recoverable annual value Conservative estimate — actuals will depend on how aggressively each stream is built out £100,000–£250,000

These numbers compound. The service renewal programme alone builds a recurring revenue floor that grows every year. Better commercial materials don't just win one contract — they change the type of work JPR gets invited to tender for. The digital infrastructure, once built, continues working without additional spend.

Three phases. Visible value from week one. Full capability within six months.

The plan is structured around JPR's existing BigChange subscription — which already includes the APIs, customer portal, and document retrieval tools needed for this build. This is not starting from scratch. It's activating what's already in place and building the right interfaces around it.

Key discovery: BigChange's Jobs API, Documents API, Customer Portal, and Webhooks are all available on JPR's current plan. The certificates are retrievable, the customer portal is switch-on-able, and the integration backbone exists. The work is connection and build — not procurement of new systems.

01
Phase 1 — Months 1–3 · Immediate impact

New website + quick wins + BigChange connection

Phase 1 is about visible, immediate results. A website that reflects the quality of the business. Online enquiry forms that feed jobs directly into BigChange — ending the manual re-keying loop. The backend foundation (BFF spine) that Phase 2 reuses, built once and built right.

  • Testimonials page taken down or fixed immediately (this week, regardless of wider project)
  • Dead social links removed (Google Plus / incorrect YouTube)
  • Full website rebuild — design reflecting JPR's actual scale and credibility
  • Fault report + service enquiry forms writing jobs directly into BigChange via Jobs API
  • Instant boiler quote tool5, refreshed Google reviews integration, GA4 analytics
  • Gas Safe, Worcester Bosch, Powrmatic, OFTEC and F-Gas accreditations correctly displayed
  • Commercial capability PDF and landlord services pack (first materials for tender bids)
  • Google Business Profile fully built out — photos, services, Q&A, review-request workflow
  • BFF backend skeleton (auth + BigChange + Xero connections) — foundation Phase 2 reuses
02
Phase 2 — Months 3–5 · Customer self-service

Customer portal PWA — certificates, job tracking, payments

Phase 2 gives customers a logged-in layer. Using BigChange's Documents API (confirmed: certificates are retrievable by property), customers can access their own compliance records. Landlords get automatic certificate delivery — zero admin on their side. Tenants get job tracking and ETA visibility.

  • Secure login portal — accessible on any device, installable as a mobile app (PWA)
  • Certificate access: pull completed job PDFs by property from BigChange Documents API
  • Live job tracking with engineer ETA — reduces inbound "where's my engineer" calls
  • Invoice view and online payment via Xero integration
  • Service plan signup and recurring billing
  • Automated Gas Safety reminder: 28 days before certificate expiry — delivered automatically to landlord and tenant (UK legal requirement; criminal liability for landlords who miss it)2
  • Fault reporting routed to correct recipient: tenant → landlord and/or JPR, configurable per property
  • Decision point: embed BigChange's native portal layer or build custom, confirmed against live BigChange API capabilities

The landlord compliance advantage: Existing landlord-compliance tools require landlords to manually upload certificates. JPR's advantage is that the certificate is delivered automatically because JPR did the work and it's already in BigChange — zero landlord admin, timestamped proof. This is a genuine moat: you have to be the contractor to do it. It turns a compliance obligation3 into a retention and loyalty tool.

03
Phase 3 — Months 5–12 · AI workflows + full automation

AI-native operations — less admin, faster quoting, smarter scheduling

Phase 3 is where the business becomes operationally modern. The goal is that five engineers run at the efficiency of eight, and the office function handles more volume on the same headcount. Every automation in this phase is built on the data foundation established in Phases 1 and 2.

  • Engineer voice-note workflow: dictate a 60–90 second voice note post-job → AI transcribes locally, structures into a job sheet, drafts customer-facing summary, queues for office review. 2–3 hours recovered per engineer per week
  • AI quote generation: engineer voice + photos → AI applies JPR's pricing templates → draft for director approval → sent within hours, not days
  • AI-assisted commercial tendering: JPR's capability history, past wins, and case studies indexed as a knowledge base. New RFQ arrives → brief the AI → full tender draft in 2 hours, director edits and signs
  • Automated customer journey: booking confirmation → 24h reminder → on-my-way ETA → post-job summary + certificate + review request → annual service reminder. All triggered automatically from BigChange job status
  • Review-collection programme: every completed job triggers a review request; AI drafts on-brand responses to new reviews for director approval
  • Plant manual indexing: Powrmatic, Hamworthy, Worcester Bosch, Vaillant, Ideal manuals digitised and indexed — engineers ask natural-language questions, AI returns the answer with cited source page
  • Analytics and reporting: job-type revenue split, quote conversion rate, service renewal rate, review velocity — visible to directors without manual extraction

Five things that cost nothing or close to nothing and should happen regardless of any wider decision.

1

Take down or redirect the testimonials page

The /testimonials page is showing a live SQL database error to every customer who visits it. This is the single most damaging thing on the site. Remove the link from the navigation or put up a temporary holding page. Takes 10 minutes.

2

Remove the Google Plus and Worcester Bosch YouTube links

Google Plus shut down in 2019. The YouTube link goes to Worcester Bosch's channel. Both make JPR look like the website hasn't been looked at in years — because it hasn't. Remove both from the footer or navigation.

3

Set up a basic review-request process

After every completed job, the engineer or office sends a simple SMS or email with a direct link to JPR's Google review page. A manual template works fine to start. 20 reviews a month over 6 months materially changes how JPR appears in search results and to commercial procurement teams.

4

Claim and complete the Google Business Profile

Update the GBP with current photos, correct opening hours, a complete services list, and responses to existing reviews. This is free and has a direct impact on how JPR appears in local search results within days.

5

Activate BigChange's Customer Portal

JPR's current BigChange subscription includes a customer portal that is switch-on-able at near-zero additional cost. Landlords and commercial clients can access job records and certificates without phoning in. This can be live within a week of the decision to activate it.

What this scope would cost through conventional agencies and developers.

For context: the following reflects current UK market rates for the work described in this plan, sourced from trades-sector agencies and web development firms specialising in SME digital transformation.

Scope Agency / freelance market rate Notes
Trades marketing agency (monthly retainer) £1,500–£4,000/month Covers social media, GBP management, SEO, review collection. Does not include website rebuild or platform work.
Website rebuild (trades sector) £5,000–£15,000 one-off Standard WordPress or Webflow build. Does not include BigChange integration or custom booking tools.
BigChange / FSM integration development £8,000–£20,000 one-off Custom API integration work — Jobs API, Documents API, webhook-based automation. Requires a developer experienced with BigChange's API.
Customer portal / PWA build £15,000–£40,000 one-off Authenticated customer-facing portal with certificate access, job tracking, and payment integration. Agency rate for this scope is typically in the upper end of this range.
AI workflow implementation (Phase 3) £10,000–£25,000 one-off + £500–£1,500/month Voice-to-job-sheet, AI quoting, automated customer journey. Requires AI specialist + workflow developer.
Commercial capability materials (PDF / case studies) £2,000–£6,000 one-off Copywriting, design, and production of capability statement, landlord pack, and commercial case study library.
Total market equivalent — full scope £40,000–£105,000 one-off
+ £2,000–£5,500/month ongoing
Conservative range. A full-service digital agency quoting the complete Phase 1–3 scope would typically be higher, particularly for the BigChange integration and custom portal.

For reference: the trades-specialist agency sector (firms like Digital Trader, Stopper, Checkatrade's marketing arm) charges at the lower end of the marketing retainer range but does not cover platform build, integration, or AI workflow implementation. To get the full scope delivered through the conventional market, a business of JPR's size would typically be working with two or three separate suppliers — a web agency, an integration developer, and a marketing agency — with all the co-ordination cost that brings.

The strongest reason to build the platform: it turns one-off work into recurring income.

Installs and repairs are one-off and lumpy. A monthly service plan — the JPR Care model — converts a slice of that into predictable, recurring, compounding revenue. It is the difference between a jobbing trade and a business with an asset.

It is worth more than the cash it brings in. Buyers and boards pay a premium for recurring revenue, and the home-services market is actively chasing it — firms with a strong recurring mix are valued at materially higher multiples of profit than those living job to job.9 A service plan therefore lifts the enterprise value of the whole firm, not just the monthly takings.

It is the flywheel that powers everything else. A guaranteed annual re-book smooths engineer scheduling, and it builds a captive list for gas-safety renewals — exactly what feeds the landlord-compliance advantage above. Higher lifetime value, stickier customers, and far cheaper than forever chasing the next one-off job.

The platform is what makes it possible. You cannot run hundreds of monthly subscriptions on paper job sheets — it needs the billing, the customer account, the automated reminders and the data layer.8 That is the strongest business case for building the platform at all: the recurring-revenue engine is the thing that pays it back.

The model is proven. British Gas built a national business on exactly this — boiler and heating cover billed monthly.6 JPR wins the same model locally, on a named, trusted engineer the customer actually meets, instead of a call centre.

The medium-term picture. What JPR looks like when this is done.

Within 2–12 months

  • A modern website that converts visitors into enquiries instead of bouncing them
  • Online booking and fault reporting removing the phone-call dependency
  • Landlords receiving compliance certificates automatically — zero admin
  • A growing Google review base making JPR the obvious first choice in local search
  • Quotes turning around in hours, not days
  • Commercial capability materials ready for any tender or procurement request

Within 8–24 months

  • Five engineers generating the output of seven or eight, on the same salaries, through recovered admin time
  • A measurable annual-service recurring revenue floor that compounds each year
  • Commercial contract base expanded — JPR visibly competing at the level its engineering capability warrants
  • Data-led decisions: quote conversion rate, job-type profitability, engineer utilisation — all visible to directors
  • Ready early for the shift to heat pumps and electric heating — moving ahead of it while competitors stay gas-only, instead of scrambling when the market turns1

The longer-term shift: The heating industry is transitioning. Gas Safe remains the core, but heat pump installations, electrification, and renewable adjacencies are moving from specialist to mainstream. A business with a modern digital infrastructure, a clean customer data layer, and AI-assisted quoting is positioned to take on that transition without rebuilding from scratch. A business still running on manual job sheets and a 2018 website is not.

How this gets delivered. Who does what. What the sequence looks like.

V360HQ is a multi-specialist management and strategy firm. The JPR engagement draws on a dedicated team covering strategy, digital build, design, and marketing — all coordinated through a single point of contact, without the overhead of managing multiple agencies.

What we cover

Delivery sequence

Phase 1 delivers the visible, customer-facing improvements first — so JPR sees results quickly and the business case is validated in practice before Phase 2 investment. The backend spine is built once in Phase 1 and reused throughout. No rework, no starting over.

Starting point: The immediate actions in Section 06 can begin this week — independent of any contract or formal engagement decision. The testimonials page, the dead social links, the Google Business Profile, and the BigChange portal activation cost nothing and should happen regardless. We recommend starting there.

Sources

Claims marked in the text link to the sources below. Figures specific to JPR — recoverable value, engineer efficiency, build cost — are V360HQ's own modelling and are deliberately not externally cited.

  1. UK Government — Boiler Upgrade Scheme: what you can get — the heat-pump / electrification transition.
  2. HSE — Gas safety records: a landlord's responsibilities — the duty to give the tenant the record.
  3. UK Government — Guide to the Renters' Rights Act — the rising compliance bar for landlords.
  4. BrightLocal — Local Consumer Review Survey — how reviews drive local customer choice.
  5. BOXT — Fixed-price boiler quotes online — the instant fixed-price quoting model.
  6. British Gas — Boiler & Heating Cover — the national recurring-cover model.
  7. UK Government — SME Digital Adoption Taskforce: Final Report — the value of digital adoption for small firms.
  8. ServiceTitan — Service & Membership Agreement Software — the platform that runs recurring service plans.
  9. CFOx Advisory — Home Services 2026 M&A Outlook — recurring revenue and business valuation.
Branding shown is placeholder pending JPR Combustions Ltd's locked brand pack. © 2026 V360HQ — prepared for JPR Combustions Ltd. Strategic report, June 2026.