Brief

One brief. One clear next step.

This page keeps the first message focused so the reply can quickly show fit, scope, and the right next step.

If the work is real, the form should make the decision easier, not harder to reach. That is the standard this page is built around.

What to include

The real bottleneck, the decision pressure, the budget lane, and the timing constraint are enough to start.

What happens next

The intake should come back with fit, scope direction, a booked call, or a clean redirect if the work is not aligned.

What stays private

Operational details and sensitive context can stay in the scoped thread rather than the public page.

Intake target

Fast clarity for scoped work.

Use the brief when the next decision should be fit, scope, booking, or a direct yes-or-no answer. The form keeps the context together instead of spreading it across a chain of messages.

BriefOne business dayClear next step

Project Intake

Share the brief once. Get a clear reply.

Use this for a scoped ask, a build mandate, or a proof request when you want the reply to stay concrete.

Preparing the brief with your page context attached.

Loading the form.

What the reply should decide

A strong brief earns a concrete decision, not a longer intake maze.

Step 01

Send the main goal, current bottleneck, budget range, and timing pressure.

Step 02

Get a fit check and the strongest starting point instead of a generic discovery call.

Step 03

Move into a tighter scope with deliverables, review points, and a clear goal.

Brief readiness

This page works best when the commercial pressure is already real enough to act on.

There is already a real bottleneck, a decision-maker, and enough urgency to move if the fit is right.

The first response needs to narrow scope, not open a vague discovery process.

Private details can stay out of the public page while still giving enough signal to route correctly.

Likely routes after intake

The brief should lead to a visible next step instead of disappearing into generic follow-up.

These are the most common next-step patterns once the scope signal is clear.

Open services
1-2 weeksStrategy Sprint

A clear plan covering positioning, target buyer, page structure, offer message, and the order of work.

Best fit: Founders and team leads who want clarity before design, content, or AI work starts.

Offer message, buyer language, and pricing directionPriority fixes for homepage, services, and proof pagesA decision memo with the next build sequence
2-4 weeksRevenue Surface Rebuild

A cleaner website with better hierarchy, stronger proof, clearer calls to action, and more buyer confidence.

Best fit: Companies that have outgrown the current site and need it to support higher-value work.

Homepage, services, and key sales pagesProof structure, case studies, and trust signalsSEO-aware structure for premium English-speaking markets
4-8 weeksAI Delivery Rollout

A working AI layer across sales, support, reporting, onboarding, research, or internal operations.

Best fit: Teams that want practical AI support instead of demos or vague automation promises.

Workflow design across inbound, delivery, and operationsHuman review where risk, brand, or quality mattersRollout rules, monitoring, and fallback paths
MonthlyContent and Visibility Engine

A publishing system that keeps the brand visible, understandable, and trusted over time.

Best fit: Companies that want strategy, publishing, and visibility to work together.

Topic clusters, articles, and short-form distributionRepurposing across website, social, and education channelsPublishing cadence, reporting, and iteration

If diagnosis comes first

Some briefs should go through an audit first before they become a full build mandate.

Commercial Readiness Audit

For teams that need to know whether the offer, positioning, and buyer journey are clear enough before a bigger build starts.

Start with a brief

Revenue Surface Audit

For companies whose homepage, service pages, and proof sections look fine but still do not support the sale well enough.

See proof examples

Proof System Audit

For teams that need intake logic, qualification, and review points to be easy to understand before private diligence starts.

See proof systems