The gap between your website and your bookings
Most livery operator websites have the same problem: they describe the service, show some photos, and then give a phone number. The client has to call, wait for a response, and receive a quote by email before they can confirm a booking. In 2026, this is losing you business every single day.
The operators growing fastest have one thing in common: clients can search, get a price, and confirm a booking directly on their website — in under two minutes, at any time of day.
What white-label means
White-label means your clients see only your brand. Your logo, your colours, your domain name. The technology running behind it — the booking engine, the dispatch system, the payment processing — is invisible to them. This matters because trust drives bookings. Clients book with your company, not with a software vendor they have never heard of.
The ROI case
Operators who add a booking widget to their website typically see 30–40% of their bookings shift to self-service within the first 90 days. Every self-service booking is a booking your team did not have to answer a phone call for, manually enter into the system, and send a confirmation email for. For a fleet doing 20 bookings per day, that is 200–280 phone calls per month your team no longer has to handle.
What clients expect from a booking flow
- Instant price — no waiting for a quote
- Ability to select vehicle class and add options (meet-and-greet, child seat)
- Card payment at the time of booking
- Immediate confirmation email with booking summary
- Driver details sent automatically on assignment
If your booking flow cannot deliver all five, you are losing clients to competitors who can.
Setting it up
A properly implemented booking widget requires three things: your vehicle classes and pricing, your service area, and your brand assets (logo, colours). Once configured, it is embedded on your website with a single snippet of code. The entire setup process, done properly, takes less than two hours.