Thank you, very kind. That's on top of the list :D
sausageroll5000
I didn't know this so thank you!
Thanks for your feedback! Ah, it is a bit of a mess. Thank you for pointing those out. Tajen Studio hasn't started trading yet so the terms & conditions page was there for when I launched and registered as a limited company. The idea of this post was just to validate the idea of whether a design subscription service would actually be useful to my target companies and to see if what I'm offering is clear. But I do understand how that creates a sense of mistrust. I'll look into the GA and cookies issue, I'm still new to front-end dev so I didn't know this. Thank you again for the feedback. Really useful stuff.
Thank you! I'll have a think/research on how to better structure the landing page. :)
Hey, thanks! I'll look into that.
Hey, thanks for your feedback! I'll try to make it more personal so that potential clients know who they are working with, after all, they would be trusting me with a big part of their business.
So how it works is that you pay a monthly fee (you're not tied into a contract, so you can cancel or pause it anytime), and you can get as many designs as you can fit in that month and cancel/pause if you have no more work or continue if there is more ongoing design work.
As with the freelancer/Upwork, you have to actually go and find this freelancer to do the design for $250. So that means posting a job, going through the proposals, and if you're lucky, the freelancer is available straight away. The project is fixed price so the designer will likely have a set amount of revision rounds they are willing to do. What happens if, after those revisions, you're not happy with the results? What if the project scope changes? You're then left either increasing the price of the project to accommodate these or finding a new freelancer who might be able to do the job properly. In this situation, your time and money were wasted. Another situation is, say in a few weeks, you have more design work needed, and you go back to the same freelancer, they can come back to you saying they are unavailable. A design subscription offers reliability so that, when you have more work, you can resume your subscription and get work done straight away.
I'm unsure what you mean by a consultant designer (is this a full-time designer?), so I'll answer this once I get more clarification.
With the Figma and Calendly links, I wanted to this site out as soon as possible, so although these are not ideal, they do the job and have saved me time instead of creating separate case study pages (which are coming) and integrating appointment booking functionality within the site.
This is getting super long now, but thank you for your feedback again and I'll consider it all carefully! :)
Thank you for the feedback :) Based on feedback from others too, the hero section does need some work. I'll add this to the list!