Hosting & Management
Send the change, see it live — usually within a day or two
The real test of managed care isn't the infrastructure — it's the Tuesday you need a price updated, a staff photo swapped, or a holiday banner up by Friday. Managed means you send the change and it happens, without a ticket portal or a hunt for whoever built the site.
The workflow is deliberately simple: email us what you need, in whatever form you have it. New hours, a new hire's bio and photo, updated pricing, a seasonal promotion, a page for the service you just launched. Routine changes typically land within one to two business days, often same-day. Bigger asks get scoped quickly — what it involves, when it'll be live — so you're never guessing.
Changes ship with judgment attached, which is what separates this from a ticket queue. The new photo gets optimized before upload. The pricing update gets applied everywhere prices appear — including the structured data machines read. The promotion gets a professional banner, not a stretched JPEG. Small things, but they're the difference between maintained and merely edited.
This is also how sites stay alive. Sites drift out of date because updating them is somebody's eleventh priority requiring a login nobody remembers. When changes cost one email, they actually happen — and the site keeps matching the business it represents.
What this looks like in practice
- Change requests by email — no portals, no ticket ceremony
- Routine updates live within 1–2 business days, often same-day
- Professional judgment included: optimization, consistency, polish
- Structured data and SEO kept in sync with every change
- Quick scoping and honest timelines for bigger requests
The bottom line
A website should keep up with the business it represents. When changes cost one email, it does.
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A website, custom software, marketing — or all three. No pitch, no pressure. Tell us about your business and we'll show you what's possible.