Services

Websites, WordPress support, automations, and MVPs without the bloated build.

Pick one clear business problem, ship the part that matters first, then keep improving once real customers or team members use it.

Packages

Five ways to start, depending on what is slowing you down.

Pricing depends on the first outcome, the systems involved, and whether you need monthly WordPress, website, or automation help after launch.

Website Build

$750 to $2,500+

A clear website or WordPress page built around the offer, the form, and the first inquiry.

Best for: Small businesses that need a clean online presence.

  • Landing page or multi-page website
  • WordPress or React build path
  • Responsive layout
  • Contact form
  • Basic SEO
  • Deployment support

WooCommerce Automation Setup

$1,000 to $4,000+

Checkout, booking, and follow-up flows for stores losing time after the sale.

Best for: Stores and service teams using WooCommerce, bookings, or scheduling tools.

  • WooCommerce setup or optimization
  • Booking tool integration
  • Customer follow-up automation
  • Order and booking updates
  • Launch testing

AI Automation System

$1,500 to $6,000+

AI-assisted replies, summaries, and routing for recurring customer messages.

Best for: Teams with recurring customer questions, order notes, or intake messages.

  • AI chatbot or assistant
  • Follow-up email drafts
  • Customer summaries
  • Lead or support sorting
  • Connected tool setup

First MVP Launch

$5,000 to $20,000+

A usable first version with the core customer path, login or payment setup when needed, and launch support.

Best for: Founders and businesses that need a usable first version.

  • Launch plan
  • Core customer flow
  • Customer access setup
  • Payment-ready setup
  • Launch support

Monthly Support

$350 to $1,500/month

Monthly WordPress, website, and automation help after launch, so small fixes do not pile up.

Best for: Businesses that need reliable WordPress updates, small fixes, monitoring, and monthly improvements.

  • WordPress and Elementor support
  • Plugin, theme, and content updates
  • Form, speed, and layout fixes
  • Automation monitoring
  • Monthly improvement backlog

Automation examples

Automation ideas I can build around your day-to-day work.

Start with one repeated task, then connect the steps that happen before and after it. The goal is fewer missed replies, less handoff confusion, and less admin work.

Common tools: n8n, Make, Zapier, webhooks, WordPress, WooCommerce, forms, Google Sheets, Airtable, CRMs, email platforms, and AI APIs.

Example automation map

Trigger to outcome

When this happens

WooCommerce order flow

Paid order, abandoned checkout, refund request, or product question

Business gets

Customer summary, internal alert, follow-up email, and support task.

When this happens

Lead intake and qualification

Website form, ad lead, referral, or manual inquiry

Business gets

Lead score, clean CRM record, reply draft, and next-step notification.

When this happens

Booking and reminder system

Calendly booking, cancellation, reschedule, or no-show

Business gets

Confirmation, reminder, prep email, reschedule path, and client notes.

When this happens

Support triage

Email, chat, contact form question, or urgent client request

Business gets

Urgency label, summary, suggested reply, and human handoff when needed.

When this happens

Operations cleanup

Spreadsheet, CRM, WordPress, inbox, or task-board updates

Business gets

Synced records, duplicate cleanup, recurring reports, and fewer copy-paste tasks.

Integrations

Tool connections that remove routine work.

The real work usually sits between daily tasks: orders, forms, bookings, email, customer replies, and follow-up.

Connect the tools already in use
Speed up order and booking follow-up
WordPress support and monthly updates
Booking and intake workflows
Customer email automation
AI summaries for faster replies
Launch QA and handoff

FAQ

Common questions before starting.

These are the questions buyers usually ask before sending the first inquiry.

How fast can a first version launch?

Small website fixes and simple automations can often move within a week once access, content, and decisions are ready. Larger builds get a staged timeline.

Do I need to know what tools or setup I want?

No. Bring what you are using now, where work gets stuck, and what you want to be easier. I can turn that into a first scope.

Can the project start small?

Yes. I would rather solve one visible problem well, then decide whether the next step should be support, another automation, or a bigger build.

What happens after launch?

You get production checks, a simple handoff, and optional monthly support for WordPress updates, fixes, monitoring, follow-up improvements, or additional workflows.

Discovery

Pick a starting point, then shape the first scope.

The first call should identify what is broken, what tools are involved, what the first outcome should be, and what it will take to ship it.

Request a quote