ALL SPECS / SPEC A.3
A CMS your team runs
For teams that email a developer to change a headline. We wire your site to an editing setup your own people use — pages, posts, prices, photos — with guardrails so nobody can break it.
IN PLAIN WORDS — CHANGE YOUR OWN PRICES, PAGES, AND PHOTOS — AS EASILY AS EDITING A DOCUMENT.
SPEC A.3 — WEBSITES
PIECE A
What's included
Everything on the ticket, in writing
SPEC A.3 — DELIVERABLES
FIXED SCOPE — WRITTEN PROPOSAL
A.3.1
Editing that matches your team
Fields for the things you actually change, and nothing you can break by accident.
A.3.2
On your site or a new one
Retrofit onto the site you have, or built into a new one from the start.
A.3.3
Training included
A real walkthrough with your team, plus a short plain-language guide your next hire can follow.
A.3.4
Guardrails on publishing
Drafts, previews, and rollbacks — so pressing publish isn't scary.
How it goes
Four steps, all visible
You see real work at every step — nothing disappears into a studio and comes back as a reveal.
01
Map what changes
Which content actually gets edited, how often, and by whom — that's what gets built.
02
Model the content
Pages and fields set up around that reality, not around a generic blog template.
03
Wire + migrate
Connected to the live site, with your existing content moved in and checked.
04
Train + hand over
Your team publishes on their own — while we're still in the room.
Fit
It's for you if…
And if none of these sound like you, we'll say so on the call — a wrong-fit project costs us more than it costs you.
- Every text change goes through a developer or an agency
- Content sits in docs and emails waiting for “the website person”
- Marketing wants to move faster than IT tickets allow
- You've been burned by an editor nobody could figure out
Outcome
Copy changed, page published, price updated — by your own team, the same afternoon.
Tell us what your team still does by hand.
Thirty minutes. You'll leave knowing what we'd build, what it would cost, and whether it's worth doing at all.
Prefer to write first? Use the full form.