Key takeaways
- We'll ask about goals, audience, pain points, content, timeline.
- Bring examples and honesty. We're scoping, not selling.
- No commitment. A good call is useful either way.
A discovery call is where the project gets defined. It's a conversation, not a pitch. Here's what to expect and how to prepare.
What we'll ask
- Goals: what do you want the site to achieve?
- Audience: who are you trying to reach?
- Current pain points: what's not working now?
- Content: what exists? What needs creating?
- Timeline and budget: rough parameters
What you should bring
An idea of your goals. Examples of sites you like (or dislike). Any existing content or assets. Honesty about budget and timeline. We're not trying to trap you—we're trying to scope.
What happens next
We'll send a proposal or scope document. It might include options: different approaches, timelines, or phases. You decide what fits.
No pressure
A good discovery call is informative for both sides. If it's not a fit, we'll say so. You're not committing to anything by having the call.
FAQs
Usually 30–45 minutes. Enough to understand the project.
That's fine. We can still talk—it helps you plan.