Partner With egoMade

You have the clients. I have the skills. Let's build something together.

I'm strong in RapidWeaver Elements and design & development, but finding clients is the hard part. If you have clients who need websites - or you're an agency or freelancer looking for a reliable dev partner - I'm open to partnership: revenue share, white-label, or referral. No pressure, just a conversation.

What I Bring to the Table

Expertise you can white-label or partner on

RapidWeaver Elements

Deep experience building and customizing sites in Elements: layouts, components, responsive design, and clean projects your clients can edit.

Design

Modern, clear visual design: typography, color, spacing, and structure. From wireframes to polished UI that fits your clients' brands.

Development

HTML, CSS, and light PHP where needed. Custom functionality, CMS-style setups, and integrations so projects work the way clients expect.

Classic to Elements

Migrating existing RapidWeaver Classic sites to Elements or PHP + CMS: design refresh, structure, and content preserved.

Who This Is For

Ideal partners and setups

Agencies & Studios

You handle strategy, copy, and client contact; I handle design and build in Elements. White-label or co-delivery - we define the split.

Freelancers With Overflow

You have more leads than capacity. Refer clients to me for Elements work, or subcontract: I deliver, you keep the relationship and margin.

Anyone With Clients

Consultants, marketers, or designers who don't build in Elements - send your clients my way. Referral fee or rev-share, we can discuss.

Ways We Can Work Together

Flexible - we can tailor to what fits you

1

Revenue share

We agree on a split (e.g. 60/40 or 70/30). You bring the client and manage the relationship; I do the design and build. You invoice or we structure it so you're covered.

2

White-label / subcontract

I deliver as your backend partner. The client sees only you. You set the price and timeline; we agree on my rate. No egoMade branding unless you want it.

3

Referral

You refer clients who need Elements or migration work. I handle the project and pay you a referral fee or percentage once the job is done. Simple and low-commitment.

Partnership FAQs

Common questions about working together

We agree on a percentage split (e.g. you 60%, me 40%, or whatever is fair for who does what). You typically invoice the client; when you're paid, you send my share. Alternatively, we can structure it so the client pays in two parts (you and me). It's flexible - we'll align on something that works for both of us.

RapidWeaver Elements sites (new builds, redesigns, or tweaks), Classic-to-Elements migrations, and light PHP/CMS work. I'm best when the stack is Elements or simple HTML/CSS/PHP. Very large custom apps or heavy backend work are outside my focus - happy to point you elsewhere for those.

Only if you want them to. For white-label or subcontract work, I stay in the background: you're the face, I deliver. For referrals, the client usually works with me directly and knows they were referred by you. We can always agree on how to present the relationship (e.g. “our development partner” vs. no mention).

Email and shared docs are fine to start. You send briefs, copy, brand notes, and any assets; I confirm scope and timeline, then deliver. We can add Slack, Notion, or your preferred tool if the volume grows. I'm used to working async and replying within a business day.

No long-term contract. We can try one project and see how it goes. Small jobs (e.g. tweaks, single-page updates) are fine; for very small one-offs we might agree on a fixed fee instead of a split. The idea is to keep it simple and scalable.

That's enough. One referral is a great start. We'll agree on a referral fee or percentage for that project; if more come later, we can keep the same terms or adjust. No pressure to send a pipeline - quality and fit matter more than volume.

Let's Talk

No pitch, no commitment - just a short conversation to see if we're a good fit. Tell me a bit about your clients or your agency, and what you're looking for in a design/development partner.