Onboarding intake.
This is the form I send after the discovery call. The more detail you give me up front, the faster we launch, usually 3 to 4 weeks of build time once it comes back. Save and return; nothing has to be filled in one sitting.
Open the onboarding form
Nine sections covering your business, services, customers, brand, and assets. Plan on roughly fifteen to twenty minutes in one sitting, since the form does not save progress between visits.
Reviewing your preview link.
Once design starts, I send you a private preview URL. The form below is how you give me structured feedback. Unlimited revision rounds; honest notes always beat polite ones.
Submit design feedback
Drop the preview URL, tell me what is working and what is not, and how urgent the changes are. Structured notes get us to the right revisions faster.
Day-to-day requests.
Once your site is live, two channels cover most of what you'll need. Use the urgency cue at the top of each. Time-critical? Skip the form and call (928) 315-9094.
Content update
New hours, a new service, a photo swap, a typo fix, a price change, or a seasonal callout. Routine edits like these tend to land quickly on most business days.
Emergency support
The site being down, wrong information being live, or a security concern all skip the queue and get handled fast on most business days.
Request hourly work
Custom calculator, third-party booking integration, email-marketing template, migration, or a bespoke interactive page. Describe what you need; a written estimate at $100/hour lands within one business day.
Refer, review, or ask.
Three forms that aren't tied to a build phase. Use them whenever they fit; none are time-sensitive, none are required.
If forms aren't your thing.
All three reach the same person. Pick whichever's easiest for you.
Use email for anything you want a written record of. Text replies are usually the fastest channel when you need a quick turnaround.
Bookmarks worth keeping.
Things you might want to pull up without contacting me. All public, all current, all written for owners rather than developers.