Scope your project
on a call.
Not an intake form, not a discovery-phase invoice. A single call, no slides. You describe the problem, we ask the uncomfortable questions, you leave with a written opinion — whether that’s a proposal or a referral elsewhere.
Four things happen on the call.
- 01
Walk us through what you’re building.
The context, the audience, what success looks like. If you have a rough brief or a live site, share it beforehand so we don’t burn the call catching up.
- 02
We’ll poke at scope and surface risks.
Where the brief is fuzzy, where the timeline is optimistic, where the stack choice will cost you later. Not nice-to-haves — the things that actually sink projects.
- 03
You leave with a written summary.
Not a marketing PDF. A short recap of what we heard, what we’d do differently, and — if we’re a fit — a realistic shape of scope, price, and timeline.
- 04
No pressure on what happens next.
Hire us, hire someone else, sit on the summary for six months — all fine. The call has value even if it ends without a proposal.
Tell us what’s on your plate.
We reply within one business day with a time that works — or a written answer if that’s all you need.
A short prep list,
not homework.
You don’t need polished answers to any of these. Rough ones are fine. The call is more useful when we both show up with the same raw material in hand.
- 01
The one-sentence version of the problem you’re trying to solve.
- 02
Any existing site, staging URL, or brief document — rough is fine.
- 03
Two or three sites you admire (and what exactly you admire about them).
- 04
A rough sense of the outcome you’d call success. Helps us scope honestly.
- 05
The one thing that has to be true for this project to be worth doing.
Write first, call later.
If a call feels like too much commitment today, drop us an email. A paragraph about what you're working on is enough for a useful reply.
or email hello@genvoid.com