§ Website cost / Fixed scope
Turn the estimate into
a fixed scope.

This goes to my inbox, not an intake team. I'll review the calculator result against the current site and market, then ask for anything needed to put a fixed number in writing.
The calculator result is already in the project field. Add your business, current site, contact details, budget, and timeline. The result is directional; the number I send back is based on the real scope.
Delivered directly via the site's own lead pipeline — the same Resend wiring I ship to clients. No CRM, no auto-responder drip.
I check the calculator result against the current site, the markets you serve, and the searches worth competing for. If anything is missing, I ask before pricing it.
Scope and price locked before anything starts. No hourly billing, no surprise invoices — the floors below are published on purpose.
Most comparable scopes: $12,500.
Operation at $1,500 a month.
Those are planning anchors, not firm prices. Focused builds can start at $6,000 with smaller operating plans from $800 a month. A genuine enterprise replacement can carry a $65,000–$95,000-plus planning range. Every job is quoted after I review what the business, market, migration, integrations, and timeline require.
If you want to size the project before sending the form, use the website cost calculator. It uses the same published planning anchors and passes the result into this form.
The care plan is everything after launch: content, indexing, Google Business Profile operations, monitoring, and a monthly report you can read in five minutes. No hourly billing, no surprise invoices.
The work is full-stack — strategy, architecture, copy, build, launch — and the only person between the brief and the finished site is me. If the budget doesn't fit the project, I'll tell you straight and point you toward someone better suited.