One-time purchase
No subscription required to start using the system in your own client work.
For solo devs, indie founders, and one-person studios
ScopePacket gives you the guided business playbooks, low-overhead Astro starter, and client-fit recipes that help one-person operators move from quick-start to first client delivery faster, with clearer pricing, cleaner launch, and better support boundaries.
Launch price $99. Standard price $149. One decent local-business site can often repay the packet quickly, and lifetime updates are included.
One-time purchase
No subscription required to start using the system in your own client work.
Lifetime updates
Future updates apply to the ScopePacket code starter and the business-model docs.
Light support
Reasonable buyer help for access, onboarding, and product questions without promising done-for-you delivery.
Instant private access
Checkout through Polar, then move straight into the private docs and repo flow.
Why it converts better than a bare template
ScopePacket is for people who want a steadier websites offer with a guided path through setup, pricing, delivery, and support, not just a repo to customize forever.
Open a buyer path that helps you orient the offer, set up your own proof, and move toward first outreach instead of staring at a blank repo.
Use the playbooks to package the work, quote it clearly, and stop renegotiating the whole offer every time a lead asks basic questions.
Launch, handoff, maintenance, and small growth moves stay inside a cleaner solo workflow so one-person delivery does not collapse into chaos.
How the model works
The goal is not to promise miracles. The goal is to help one-person operators move from signed client to strong first version faster, then handle edits and support with less chaos.
Use the packet to get your own offer, proof, and first-client path moving before you disappear into endless setup work.
Use the business-model framing, pricing, and scope language to sell website work as a focused service instead of a vague custom build.
Start from the ScopePacket baseline so you are not solving layout, content structure, and launch decisions from zero.
Use the playbooks to handle maintenance, support, and small upsells cleanly instead of letting post-launch work turn indefinite.
Author credibility
ScopePacket is shaped by more than 10 years in software development and 80+ delivered local-business websites across real commercial work. The founder shares work and notes publicly as @bobloppety on X while keeping the public offer grounded in practical delivery, not guru promises.
Proof disclosure
Only opinions from people who explicitly agreed to be disclosed are ever named publicly. Some work remains private because client NDAs and private delivery arrangements still apply.
The public site leads with packet artifacts, guided preview pages, and demo surfaces so buyers can judge what is real without exposing private client work or the full private playbook.
Operator proof
This is the commercial case for ScopePacket in plain language: faster to a saleable websites offer, easier to justify than another speculative side project, and built for one-person delivery.
One-time purchase
Buy the packet once, then use it in your own client work without turning the system into another subscription.
Lifetime updates
Updates apply to both the ScopePacket starter and the business-model material sold with it.
80+ delivered sites behind the model
The packet is informed by real local-business delivery experience, not only by template packaging.
3 local-business recipe fits
Service, practice, and brochure-style projects are all covered by the current packet.
Low hosting and maintenance overhead
The model leans on fast static delivery so you are not defending endless plugin upkeep on small sites.
Guided buyer path after purchase
The packet is structured to move from quick-start into pricing, delivery, and post-launch material instead of dumping a repo on the buyer.
ScopePacket is for builders who want a faster path to first client revenue. Instead of hoping a product eventually monetizes, you can move through a guided quick-start, package a practical websites offer, and aim for a first local-business sale that is already worth more than the packet in many regions.
Built for solo freelancers, indie founders, and SaaS pivots that need a more immediate commercial loop.
The packet is meant to close the business gaps that usually sit outside the repo: offer framing, pricing logic, closing language, scope guardrails, handoff, and support. The starter matters because it helps delivery move fast, but the model is what makes the starter commercially usable.
For operators who want a saleable offer instead of a prettier blank slate.
The system is built around getting to a strong first version quickly, then tightening pricing, proof, and delivery from a stable base. That matters when you are trying to ship work cleanly without disappearing into endless custom polish before the client sees anything useful.
Optimized for first presentable versions and shorter feedback loops.
A lot of local-business buyers do not want hosting fees, plugin upkeep, and mystery maintenance retainers piled on top of the initial project. ScopePacket gives you language for selling a cleaner static-site offer with lower ongoing overhead than a typical WordPress-style setup.
Supporting proof, not a universal promise.
The public previews are meant to prove that the business-model layer is concrete: there is a quick-start, pricing and closing guidance, a delivery path, and post-launch thinking. They are not meant to replace the private buyer docs you unlock after purchase.
Selective proof by design, not a free public mirror of the packet.
Local-business website work is local, fragmented, and global at the same time. There are millions of businesses, different regions, and more demand than one operator could personally cover. Teaching a strong model to someone in another city or country does not reduce the founder's own opportunity. It expands the usefulness of the system without turning the market into a zero-sum game.
Direct answer to the question serious buyers ask before they trust a business-model product.
Founder rationale
Because local-business website work is not a zero-sum market. There are millions of businesses across different cities, regions, and countries, and one operator cannot personally serve all of them. Sharing the model does not reduce the founder's own opportunity. It gives other serious operators a cleaner starting point while the founder keeps covering his own local market.
Proof
The public site shows the business model, starter, and recipes from multiple angles so buyers can tell this is a working system, not a vague promise.
Business-model proof
Starter proof
Recipe proof
Inside quick start
See how ScopePacket opens: orient the offer, get your own proof in place, and move toward the first real outreach without treating the packet like a random dump of files.
Inside getting clients
Preview the material that helps you package the work, price it clearly, and close the right kind of local-business website project without sounding vague or risky.
Inside delivery
See how projects move from intake to launch so solo delivery feels repeatable instead of improvised.
botanical preset
A lead-driven local service site showing how the starter can move from baseline to client-ready quickly.
trust preset
A calmer authority-led version for consultants, advisers, and expertise-driven local businesses.
bold preset
A lean brochure version for smaller businesses that still need a professional launch and clean handoff.
What you get
ScopePacket is still one purchase, but the parts do different jobs. The business playbooks now lead from quick-start through pricing, delivery, and post-launch logic. The starter and recipes keep that path fast to execute.
The core asset: a guided buyer path through quick-start, pricing, delivery, maintenance, and growth logic for running the work like a business.
The Astro + Keystatic execution baseline that gets you from blank repo to a serious first version without rebuilding core pages every time.
Three practical starting points that help you choose the right structure for the client in front of you instead of reaching for a generic template.
Included in the purchase
Best fit
ScopePacket is strongest for solo operators who want a repeatable, commercially sensible way to sell and deliver local-business websites.
Recipes
These recipes keep the system tied to the kinds of local-business projects solo operators can package, deliver, and support repeatedly.
Service business recipe
Built for local operators who need an offer-first website that drives calls, quote requests, and visible trust quickly.
Practice business recipe
Built for legal, health, consulting, and advisory businesses that need more authority, reassurance, and professional structure.
Brochure business recipe
Built for smaller businesses that need a professional web presence without the complexity of a large custom project.
Buy ScopePacket
The guided business playbooks, ScopePacket starter, and client-fit recipes for solo operators who want local-business website work to feel faster to start, cleaner to deliver, and steadier to earn from.
$149 $99
Launch price for the current rollout. Standard price is $149. Lifetime updates included.
How purchase works
Checkout is hosted in Polar so payment and receipts are handled cleanly.
After payment, the private repo access and docs handoff follow through the configured access flow.
Open the private quick-start, get your own offer oriented, then move into the guided pricing, delivery, and support material as you use the packet.
Not for
This is a focused operating model, not a universal website toolkit or income promise.
Questions before you buy
The sharpest objections are economic and practical: can the packet pay back fast, who is it for, how quickly can you deliver, and what support or updates really mean.
Yes, that is one of the clearest fits. ScopePacket gives you a guided quick-start, the offer framing, delivery sequence, and recipe structure needed to get to a presentable first client version faster. It does not replace effort, outreach, or proof-building, but it does reduce how much you have to invent from zero.
For many solo operators, yes. Selling a practical local-business website is usually a shorter path to first revenue than hoping a speculative SaaS product eventually converts. ScopePacket is built for that lower-risk shift toward direct service work, while staying honest that you still need to sell and deliver well.
No. The strongest fit is a builder who can communicate clearly, adapt a proven structure, and run a bounded client project professionally. If you can ship a clean site and handle client expectations sensibly, the packet is aimed at you.
Because this is the rollout price, not the long-term ceiling. Even at $99, you are buying a one-time package that includes the business model, the delivery starter, the recipes, and lifetime updates to the material.
In many markets, yes. A straightforward first site can still land at $200 or more, and more mature offers often move well beyond that. ScopePacket is deliberately priced so that a single decent local-business project can repay it quickly if you put the system to work.
Pricing depends on region, proof, and how polished your offer is. In lower-income markets, early straightforward sites can still land around $200 to $400. In higher-income markets, similar sites often move toward $500 to $1,000 and beyond. The playbooks help you price in a way that matches your market instead of forcing one universal number.
Because local-business website work is local and massively distributed. One operator cannot personally cover every city, country, or niche. Packaging the model into a product does not reduce the founder's own opportunity. It turns proven operating experience into a separate asset that other serious buyers can use in their own markets.
It is built first for solo devs, indie founders starting a service line, freelancers, and one-person studios selling brochure, lead-gen, and service websites to local businesses.
Ready to buy
ScopePacket combines the business model, the delivery starter, and the recipes you need to make local-business website work feel more repeatable.