The workflow is built for operational continuity: clear intake, controlled launch, and ongoing maintenance with defined support boundaries.
Most engagements follow the same sequence: requirements intake, baseline deployment, then request-driven updates. Larger changes move through scoped implementation.
Onboarding is treated as risk reduction: valid contact paths, accurate service pages, mobile correctness, and production safeguards before launch.
Typical required inputs are service definitions, service areas, contact routing, domain ownership details, and core visual assets. This creates a stable baseline for iteration.
After launch, requests are handled through a lightweight update workflow. Typical items include content edits, service area updates, media swaps, and page corrections.
Most failures in website operations are small regressions left unresolved. The service treats those as routine maintenance work instead of emergency events.
Most requests are handled during business hours. Service-impacting failures (outage, broken forms, critical rendering issues) are treated as urgent.
Required request format is simple: affected page, intended change, and corrected content. For larger updates, scope and acceptance criteria are agreed before work begins.
When a request expands into feature work (new sections, integrations, custom behavior), it transitions into scoped project delivery to keep timelines and risk explicit.
See monthly plan coverage and onboarding requirements.