Decision support

Grouped answers for buyers comparing fit, scope, and launch risk.

The FAQ page should feel organized around real objections instead of a loose accordion dump.

Start a Brief

Review Pricing

Business planning documents and laptop

Objection map

Group uncertainty by fit, pricing, revisions, ownership, and launch expectations.

Getting started

Project fit, first step, and required inputs.

What should we prepare first?

Goals, current site links, examples, service details, testimonials, and launch timing.

Can we start if the offer is unclear?

Yes. A positioning sprint can clarify the offer before build work.

Who is this best for?

Service brands, studios, consultants, and small teams selling expertise.

Pricing and timeline

Budget, scope, schedule, and decision rhythm.

How long does a project take?

Timing depends on page count, content readiness, approvals, and launch support.

What affects price most?

Strategy depth, page count, proof needs, copy, integrations, and revision complexity.

Can a project be phased?

Yes. Start with strategy or one critical route, then extend the site.

Revisions and support

How review, changes, and post-launch care work.

How is feedback handled?

Use structured review windows and consolidated notes.

What counts as a scope change?

New pages, new features, major direction shifts, or extra content production.

Can support continue after launch?

Yes. Ongoing improvements can be scoped as launch support.

Ownership and handoff

Editing, assets, and operational confidence.

Can we edit the site later?

Yes. The kit is built from editable builder sections.

Do we own the content?

Use this answer to explain ownership, licenses, and handoff expectations.

Will pages work on mobile?

The builder sections are responsive and should be QA checked before launch.

Still Have a Question?

The best FAQ page lowers risk before the brief.

Keep this route useful by answering the questions that affect budget, timing, ownership, and confidence.

Fit clarity

Prospects can understand whether this is strategy, build, or support before contacting.

Scope clarity

The page explains why different levels of depth change timing and price.

Handoff clarity

Ownership, editing, review, and launch expectations are addressed directly.

Still deciding?

Use the brief page when the answer depends on your offer, content, or launch deadline.

A good first message can be short: what needs to change, when it needs to launch, and what decision the site should help buyers make.