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What happens after you submit

  • We review your brief and clarify key questions
  • We propose scope, milestones, and assumptions
  • You receive a structured quote with timeline options

What to include in your brief

  • Outcome and target users
  • Must-have features/pages
  • Integrations
  • Timeline constraints
  • Reference examples

Helpful pages

Request a quote

Share your brief. We’ll respond with a clear scope and next steps.

Open the quote request page.

Release plan and sustainability

Launch is the start of iteration, not the finish line. A release checklist, monitoring, and a feedback loop reduce risk in the first 30 days.

Sustainability comes from operational basics: permissions, backups, performance monitoring, and a clear support path.

  • Checklist: critical flows, forms, redirects
  • Monitoring: error tracking and baseline metrics
  • Backups: schedule and rollback plan
  • Iteration: targeted improvements after launch

Information architecture and internal linking

A strong structure improves both usability and search visibility. A clear hub page connected to focused topic pages creates a predictable path for users and crawlers.

Use the overview at Get a Quote and the workflow at Get a Quote to align the structure.

  • Pillar → all cluster pages
  • Guide → 6–10 selected clusters
  • Cluster → pillar + relevant pages + 1–2 sibling topics
  • Quote → pillar + pricing

Delivery standards and acceptance criteria

High-quality delivery starts with measurable acceptance criteria. When goals are translated into explicit checks—flows, performance, accessibility, and security—teams make faster decisions and reduce rework.

Acceptance criteria should guide implementation, not just final review. This keeps scope stable and makes timelines predictable.

  • Critical journeys: validated end-to-end
  • Performance: baseline targets and optimization plan
  • Content structure: consistent templates and hierarchy
  • Security: permissions and basic hardening

Operating rhythm: communication and reporting

A reliable operating rhythm reduces surprises. Weekly summaries, clear priorities, and written decisions help stakeholders stay aligned.

We keep delivery transparent through milestones, a visible backlog, and explicit definitions of done.

  • Weekly update: shipped items and blockers
  • Next steps: this week / next week priorities
  • Risks: dependencies, content readiness, integration uncertainty
  • Definition of done: agreed acceptance checks

Next step

To turn this into a practical plan, share a short brief with goals and priorities. We’ll propose a scoped approach and timeline.

Start here: Get a Quote

Scope definition: a practical method

Scope is not only a list of features—it’s a boundary. Clear boundaries make estimates reliable and prevent uncontrolled expansion.

A practical method is to split requirements into must-have, high-priority, and later-phase items, then attach acceptance checks to each.

  • Must-have: critical journeys and baseline functionality
  • High-priority: conversion and operational improvements
  • Later-phase: enhancements after validation
  • Acceptance: measurable checks per item

Release plan and sustainability

Launch is the start of iteration, not the finish line. A release checklist, monitoring, and a feedback loop reduce risk in the first 30 days.

Sustainability comes from operational basics: permissions, backups, performance monitoring, and a clear support path.

  • Checklist: critical flows, forms, redirects
  • Monitoring: error tracking and baseline metrics
  • Backups: schedule and rollback plan
  • Iteration: targeted improvements after launch

Information architecture and internal linking

A strong structure improves both usability and search visibility. A clear hub page connected to focused topic pages creates a predictable path for users and crawlers.

Use the overview at Get a Quote and the workflow at Get a Quote to align the structure.

  • Pillar → all cluster pages
  • Guide → 6–10 selected clusters
  • Cluster → pillar + relevant pages + 1–2 sibling topics
  • Quote → pillar + pricing

Delivery standards and acceptance criteria

High-quality delivery starts with measurable acceptance criteria. When goals are translated into explicit checks—flows, performance, accessibility, and security—teams make faster decisions and reduce rework.

Acceptance criteria should guide implementation, not just final review. This keeps scope stable and makes timelines predictable.

  • Critical journeys: validated end-to-end
  • Performance: baseline targets and optimization plan
  • Content structure: consistent templates and hierarchy
  • Security: permissions and basic hardening

Operating rhythm: communication and reporting

A reliable operating rhythm reduces surprises. Weekly summaries, clear priorities, and written decisions help stakeholders stay aligned.

We keep delivery transparent through milestones, a visible backlog, and explicit definitions of done.

  • Weekly update: shipped items and blockers
  • Next steps: this week / next week priorities
  • Risks: dependencies, content readiness, integration uncertainty
  • Definition of done: agreed acceptance checks

Next step

To turn this into a practical plan, share a short brief with goals and priorities. We’ll propose a scoped approach and timeline.

Start here: Get a Quote

Scope definition: a practical method

Scope is not only a list of features—it’s a boundary. Clear boundaries make estimates reliable and prevent uncontrolled expansion.

A practical method is to split requirements into must-have, high-priority, and later-phase items, then attach acceptance checks to each.

  • Must-have: critical journeys and baseline functionality
  • High-priority: conversion and operational improvements
  • Later-phase: enhancements after validation
  • Acceptance: measurable checks per item

Release plan and sustainability

Launch is the start of iteration, not the finish line. A release checklist, monitoring, and a feedback loop reduce risk in the first 30 days.

Sustainability comes from operational basics: permissions, backups, performance monitoring, and a clear support path.

  • Checklist: critical flows, forms, redirects
  • Monitoring: error tracking and baseline metrics
  • Backups: schedule and rollback plan
  • Iteration: targeted improvements after launch

FAQs

Response time depends on brief completeness, but we aim to clarify scope quickly.

Yes. We can propose options based on priorities and constraints.

Yes, NDAs and confidentiality terms can be arranged.

We document changes, estimate impact, and align before proceeding.

Yes. We can provide a monthly iteration and monitoring plan.

Typical price ranges

  • Corporate website: 8,000–25,000 TL
  • E‑commerce: 25,000–120,000 TL
  • Mobile app: 60,000–350,000 TL
  • Custom software / platform: 80,000 TL+

Final pricing depends on scope, integrations, content and delivery time.

Quote process

  1. Requirements discovery
  2. Scope & timeline
  3. Proposal and kickoff
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Quote request form

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