Use email when you want to send context, links, screenshots, or a fuller project note.
Email is usually best for project briefs, review requests, and follow-up details.
Share your current situation, target customer, desired action, service area, and any launch constraints. A short brief is enough to begin.
Use this form to send your website context, project type, and the outcome you want the site to support.
You do not need a complete brief before contacting WebCamel. A strong first message simply gives enough context to understand the business, the audience, and the problem the website needs to solve. This makes the first response more practical and reduces back-and-forth.
For US SMBs, useful context usually includes the current URL, primary service or product, target market, service area, main conversion goal, and what feels weak about the current site. If the project has a deadline, platform requirement, hosting constraint, or compliance sensitivity, mention that early.
Use email when you want to send context, links, screenshots, or a fuller project note.
Email is usually best for project briefs, review requests, and follow-up details.
Use WhatsApp when you want a faster starting point or a simple first question.
WhatsApp is useful for quick coordination, but detailed project context is still easier to review in writing.
Use the phone number when a direct conversation is the fastest way to clarify fit.
A short call can help identify whether the project is a redesign, focused fix, content project, or broader website build.
After reviewing your message, WebCamel looks for the fastest path to improve the website's business value. Sometimes that means a full redesign. Sometimes it means improving service pages, fixing CTAs, adding missing trust details, cleaning up technical SEO, or creating a stronger content map before design begins.
The first response may ask for missing context, recommend a focused next step, or suggest a better order of work. The purpose is to avoid starting with a large scope when a smaller, sharper improvement would create more clarity first.