Boutique web studio in Tampa, Florida. · Limited client list. · Retainer-based relationships. · Human-read inquiries. · Personal responses. · No automated support loops. · Long-term clients only. · Selective by design. · Boutique web studio in Tampa, Florida. · Limited client list. · Retainer-based relationships. · Human-read inquiries. · Personal responses. · No automated support loops. · Long-term clients only. · Selective by design.Boutique web studio in Tampa, Florida. · Limited client list. · Retainer-based relationships. · Human-read inquiries. · Personal responses. · No automated support loops. · Long-term clients only. · Selective by design. · Boutique web studio in Tampa, Florida. · Limited client list. · Retainer-based relationships. · Human-read inquiries. · Personal responses. · No automated support loops. · Long-term clients only. · Selective by design.
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Referral-only for new clients. We read every inquiry personally.
Monthly growth programsbuilt for serious operators.
Archi FX offers 20 high-level monthly growth programs built for companies that need more than a website. These programs are designed for serious operators who need stronger visibility, better lead flow, cleaner systems, sharper content, tighter reporting, and a digital presence that actually supports the business.
Every program on this page starts at $5,000/month and is built around a defined level of service, strategy, production, and technical support. Our advanced platform, field-operations, and enterprise digital OS programs, listed as R-09 through R-20, scale up to $22,000/month before final scope is confirmed through a fit review.
Each program card gives you the monthly investment range up front, then expands into the details that matter: deliverables, integrations, support windows, exclusions, response expectations, and the type of business each program is built for. The goal is simple: show you exactly what level of Archi FX involvement your company needs to build, manage, and grow a serious digital system.
Corporate vs local permission matrix with examples of allowed promos and forbidden layout changes
+7 more deliverables, integrations, exclusions, and SLA notes in full scope
R-18
$19,400–$22,000/mo
Data Warehouse & BI Readouts
Reports that use metric definitions your leadership agrees on.
Warehouse compute/storage pass through · published ceiling $22,000/mo before cloud usage
Program complexity index 82 · published up to $22,000/mo (R-09+ family)
Data & BI
CRM / automation
Marketing hub
Metric dictionary with owners, formulas, grain, and known limitations (plain language, not jargon-only)
ETL job monitoring, anomaly alerts, and replay notes for failed batches
+7 more deliverables, integrations, exclusions, and SLA notes in full scope
R-19
$20,800–$22,000/mo
Multi-App Ecosystem Orchestration
Your public site, portal, and apps released on one shared calendar.
Dedicated technical lead included · published band tops at $22,000/mo before pass-throughs and milestone rebuild tracks
Program complexity index 88 · published up to $22,000/mo (R-09+ family)
Coordinated apps
Custom apps
CRM / automation
Data & BI
Security & compliance
Marketing hub
Ecosystem map with dependency graph, data classes, and blast-radius notes per integration
Shared release calendar across apps with blackout windows and rollback owners
+7 more deliverables, integrations, exclusions, and SLA notes in full scope
R-20
From
$22,000/mo
Enterprise Digital Operating System
Phased rebuilds, custom apps, and integration work under a master SOW.
Published entry at program ceiling · custom SOW defines pod, on-call, rebuild tracks, and quarterly true-up
Program complexity index 96 · published up to $22,000/mo (R-09+ family)
Coordinated apps
Custom apps
CRM / automation
Data & BI
Security & compliance
Marketing hub
CMS & publishing
SEO & indexation
Forms & lead routing
Performance & CWV
Multi-year platform roadmap with funding gates and kill criteria per phase
Phased rebuild tracks (experience, data, integrations, ops) with entry/exit definitions
+8 more deliverables, integrations, exclusions, and SLA notes in full scope
Program governance
All tiers assume you own domains, ad accounts, and vendor contracts unless we explicitly manage them under a separate vendor-admin addendum.
Emergency production incidents outside SLA windows are billed at the then-current incident rate or rolled into the next scope amendment.
Third-party API, SMS, email, storage, and AI token costs pass through at cost unless bundled in your SOW.
HIPAA, PCI-DSS, SOC 2, or state privacy regimes may require a compliance uplift - not every tier includes attestation work by default.
No published monthly program on this page is listed below $5,000 per month. Program codes (R-01 through R-20) label capability lanes; your signed Statement of Work may combine codes, cap hours, or attach milestone riders - read the card as orientation, not the contract.
If you are comparing more than three tiers, stop scrolling and book a fit review. We will map URL, CRM, locations, and what keeps breaking to one program code and a monthly band you can approve.
Every program on this page starts at $5,000 per month or higher. Advanced platform, field-operations, and enterprise digital OS programs (R-09 through R-20) publish up to $22,000 per month before location count, integration depth, compliance uplift, or pass-through costs. Your fit review confirms scope, integrations, and the final Statement of Work. Nothing on this page is a binding quote until a program code is attached to signed paperwork.
The professional AI workflow
Tap a step in the equation to open the matching panel. Each note explains what we handle, why it matters, and where to read more.
Workflow step
AI-Assisted Production
AI speeds drafts, structure, and production support when it sits inside review, editing, and testing. It is not a shortcut around experience.
What we handle
Content structure, outlines, and first drafts with human editing before publish.
Code support, asset planning, and research inside documented workflows.
Visual refinement and internal tools where AI saves time without touching customer-facing slop.
Clear limits: AI does not replace planning, judgment, launch review, or long-term ownership.
Why it matters
You get faster production without bloated copy, broken layouts, or generated pages nobody can maintain.
When production speed, experience, business logic, and maintenance stay connected, the website stops being a brochure and starts supporting calls, forms, and operations.
What this looks like in practice
Pages, forms, and tools that report to the same lead definitions your office uses.
Documented hosting access and third-party connections instead of mystery logins.
One accountable team across design, development, search structure, and day-to-day care.
Room to add service lines, cities, promos, and custom tools without starting over.
Why it matters
Fewer vendor handoffs and fewer leaks between find, call, and booked job.
Tap a row on the page to open the matching panel. Each note explains what usually happens, what Archi FX does instead, and why it matters to calls and booked work.
Typical one-off model
Launch-focused
A hard launch date often wins over the pages, forms, and tracking your office still needs on day one.
What this usually looks like
Scope gets trimmed so the site can go live on time, even when service pages or lead paths are still thin.
Forms, call tracking, and search basics wait for a later phase that may never get funded.
Stakeholders sign off on visuals while the parts that drive calls stay unfinished.
Why it matters
You celebrate launch week, then spend the busy season patching gaps while ads and referrals are already running.
Typical one-off model
Limited context
Most one-off shops learn the folder and the mockup, not how your team qualifies a lead or books a job.
What this usually looks like
Copy sounds generic because nobody sat with dispatch or sales on what counts as a good lead.
Service lines, territories, and seasonality get flattened into template language.
Each new vendor starts from zero because the last handoff lived in email, not in documented business rules.
Why it matters
The site reads like a brochure while your crew talks like a service company on the phone.
Typical one-off model
Short-term decisions
Fast choices during the build trade long-term upkeep for speed before the final invoice.
What this usually looks like
Plugins and page builders get picked because they are fast, not because your staff can maintain them.
Measurement and form routing are wired once, then rarely tested after the next plugin update.
Reuse and documentation lose to whatever closes the milestone list.
Why it matters
Small shortcuts become rework when something breaks, tracking drifts, or Google cannot parse what you actually sell.
Typical one-off model
Future fixes become separate problems
After handoff, every fix is a fresh project with a new scope line and a new person catching up.
What this usually looks like
A broken form or a campaign landing page waits for a statement of work before anyone touches it.
You re-explain the business, logins, and hosting setup to a rotating cast of freelancers or agencies.
Small requests get priced like full projects because there is no ongoing relationship.
Why it matters
Response time and cost spike right when you need a page live this week or a form fix before the weekend.
Typical one-off model
No long-term ownership
Once the build invoice is paid, there is no named owner for the parts that keep leads moving.
What this usually looks like
Hosting, WordPress updates, and plugin conflicts bounce between the host, the designer, and whoever answered last.
Nobody audits whether calls and forms still record after a theme or ad change.
Marketing waits on a queue while the site owner hunts for someone available.
Why it matters
Your team sends emails and opens tickets while leads leak and campaigns stall.
Archi FX retainer
Business-focused
The backlog stays tied to what ownership measures: calls, booked work, findability, and trust on the site.
What we do instead
We plan work against lead paths and service lines, not only against a launch checklist.
We flag when a technical shortcut will cost you during peak season or paid traffic.
We review what changed after major updates so forms and tracking still match how you sell.
Why it matters
Technology choices serve the scorecard you already use, not a date on a project plan.
We improve page speed, local content, crawl structure, service pages, and technical basics so search engines can understand what your business actually does.
What we handle
Mobile speed spot checks on pages that actually convert.
Service and local page structure search engines can parse.
Honest titles, headings, and internal links that match customer intent.
Crawl hygiene after redesigns, plugin changes, or new service lines.
Why it matters
Google can read what you sell and where you work. Rankings still depend on market, season, and competition; we do not promise positions.