The situation.
The most common version of this engagement is also the least glamorous. A company is good at what it does, and its website does not show it: dated design, copy nobody owns, a contact form that goes to an inbox nobody checks. Prospects look, hesitate, and call a competitor whose site simply looked taken care of.
The owner does not want a platform. They want a site they are not embarrassed by, a price that is fixed before work starts, and a launch date that holds.
What got built.
The engagement runs on a fixed scope agreed in writing: the pages, the copy, the design direction, and the launch date, settled before any building starts. The site is built on standard, open tooling that any competent developer can maintain later, and the owner's team can edit content without calling anyone.
Copy is treated as part of the build, not an afterthought: what the company does, who it is for, and why it can be trusted, written in plain language and structured so an inquiry is the natural next step.
What changed.
The typical result is plain and countable: live in about six weeks, with real inquiries arriving in the first month, because the site finally answers the question a prospect actually has.
Just as important is what stops happening. Nobody apologizes for the website in a sales call any more, and updates stop waiting for a developer to find time.
What this would look like for you.
A credible website is the smallest engagement we take, and it runs with the same discipline as the largest.
See the Build service