Pick a slot.
30 minutes, no slide deck — you lead, I listen, you walk away with an honest read on whether I can help.
Syncing open slots from the calendar…
Four steps, no surprises.
- 01
Pick a slot
Any of the openings in the widget above. 30 minutes. Confirmation email lands within the minute.
- 02
Reply with context
One paragraph on what you're building, where you're stuck, or what you want an honest read on. No deck. No brief. Just enough so I show up prepared.
- 03
The call
Google Meet link in the calendar invite. You lead. I listen hard, ask specific questions, tell you honestly whether I'm the right fit. 30 minutes, no slide deck, no sales pitch.
- 04
Next steps
Walk away with a concrete recommendation — either a scoped Discovery Sprint (paid, 1–2 weeks) or a pointer to an operator who fits better. If neither: the 30 minutes still cost you nothing.
A call, not a pitch.
Most discovery calls I've sat through as a prospect had the same shape — vendor shows slides for 20 minutes, asks for a budget, then emails a proposal. Mine doesn't work that way.
You'll get 30 minutes where you lead the conversation. I ask the precise questions a senior operator would before quoting work. You walk away with one of three things: we should scope this, here's the operator who fits better, or here's why this doesn't need a vendor at all.
The third answer happens more often than you'd think — some problems just need a weekend of focused work from an in-house engineer, not a six-figure engagement. I'll tell you when that's the case.
Questions about the call.
Yes. 30 minutes, no obligation, no sales pitch. If we end up working together, paid engagement starts with a discovery sprint — the free call is upstream of that.
Send a brief instead.
Four-field form, 45 seconds. Lands in the same inbox as the booking confirmations. I reply within a working day.
Send a brief