My ManufacturedHome Guide

Provider Network Opportunity

Manufactured home contractor leads in North Carolina

Manufactured-home projects often require separate providers for land, permits, septic, well, site work, delivery, setup, utilities, access, finish work, financing, insurance, and post-install services. My Manufactured Home Guide is building a statewide North Carolina network so provider categories and service coverage can be reviewed before future project-routing programs expand.

Why This Network Is Being Built

Homeowners may need help identifying the right provider scope.

Homeowners frequently understand the problem they are facing but not the trade, sub-service, timing, or responsibility that fits it. The public guide helps them define the path. Provider applications help the network learn which businesses perform those scopes, where they work, and whether they are interested in future manufactured-home opportunities.

Homeowner Demand Context

Project situations the guide helps homeowners organize

Land and feasibility questions

A homeowner may need septic, well, engineering, clearing, tree, grading, driveway, utility, dealer, lender, or insurance guidance before committing to land or a home.

Delivery and installation coordination

A purchased home may still need route and site readiness, foundation work, transport, setup, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, gas, inspections, and defined handoffs.

Finish and post-install work

After setup, homeowners may still need access structures, skirting, trim, drainage, driveway, landscaping, fencing, internet, repairs, or other documented service scopes.

A project that is stuck

The next useful step may be a specific provider category, an official correction, a missing document, or a clearer scope rather than another generic contractor search.

Who should apply

North Carolina contractors, trades, dealers, lenders, insurers, professional providers, and post-install service businesses that fit a fixed provider category.

Businesses willing to describe the specific sub-services they actually perform instead of claiming every service within a broad category.

Providers that can state a real business ZIP, practical travel radius, service area, contact method, and manufactured-home experience where applicable.

Providers interested in private review for possible future project opportunities without assuming acceptance, volume, exclusivity, or public placement.

What to submit

Business and contact information that can be reviewed privately.

The exact fixed provider category and any structured sub-services your business actually performs.

Business ZIP, travel radius, cities, ZIP codes, counties, exclusions, or other practical territory information.

Manufactured-home experience, licensing or insurance context where applicable, website, and any notes needed to understand your scope.

After Applying

Private review comes before any future readiness decision.

  1. Step 1

    Pending private review

    A submitted application creates provider-interest information for private review. It is not an approval, listing, match, lead assignment, or route-ready designation.

  2. Step 2

    Category and scope review

    The submitted category, sub-services, contactability, territory, and manufactured-home relevance may be checked for completeness and fit.

  3. Step 3

    Follow-up may be needed

    The network may need clarification or additional confirmation before a provider can move beyond a pending or onboarding-needed state. No outreach is promised by this page.

  4. Step 4

    Future programs require separate readiness

    Any later routing, profile, placement, bidding, lead-delivery, or financial program would require separate rules, validation, approval, and provider participation.

Important Boundaries

Application is not marketplace access.

Applying does not guarantee review timing, acceptance, leads, jobs, quotes, homeowner contact, ranking, placement, territory, or revenue.

The network is not currently presented as a public provider directory or live bidding marketplace.

My Manufactured Home Guide does not claim that an applicant's licensing, insurance, credentials, availability, service quality, or territory has been verified.

Provider category alone does not establish every sub-service; future customer-facing routing should rely on confirmed scope and geography.

Related provider resources

Provider Application

Apply to be reviewed for the provider network.

Share your business, service category, specific capabilities, and North Carolina territory. The application remains private and pending review; no lead volume, job, listing, acceptance, or response timing is promised.

Open provider application