One person, writing things down, shipping sites.
I spent ten years at agencies watching small business owners pay for websites they couldn't edit, wait six weeks for a page swap, and lose track of which firm billed them for which thing. Most of those sites didn't move a number the owner cared about.
I started JIGL to do the opposite. One person reads your email, writes the copy, builds the site, and owns the metric for thirty days after launch. Everything is written down, no decks, no Slack channels that go quiet after month three.
It's not for everybody. If you want a weekly status meeting, a Gantt chart, or a twelve-person Slack workspace, we're the wrong shop. If you want someone who'll send you an email saying "the number moved, here's why", hi, that's me.
Three principles
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One person, start to finish
The same person who reads your first email ships the site. No account manager, no handoff, no 'let me check with the team', because there is no team.
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Write it down, don't schedule it
We reply in writing because writing forces clarity. A five-sentence email tells us more than a forty-minute call, and it's searchable six months from now.
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One metric per project
Before we start, we name the single number we're building the site to move. If that number doesn't move after launch, we keep working until it does.
Think we might fit?
Tell us what you need. If we're the wrong shop, we'll say so in the reply.