Weekly RFP intelligence for web consultants and agencies
$10K+ Website Project Feed
A curated weekly feed of website, branding, redesign, migration, and digital RFPs with real budgets, clear scopes, deadlines, and direct submission links.
Built for web consultants, small agencies, independent studios, and digital partners who want better visibility into serious project opportunities.
Member result
“I just landed my first RFP project… it ended up being $10K. Got 3–4 more I’m submitting for soon.”
— Vic King
The problem
Serious projects are posted every week. Most teams never see them.
Nonprofits, municipalities, schools, business districts, institutions, public agencies, and growing organizations are constantly posting website and digital project opportunities.
Some need redesigns. Some need migrations. Some need accessibility improvements, campaign sites, portals, directories, ecommerce updates, brand refreshes, or a digital partner who can help them move a more complex project forward.
These are not always small-business website projects. Many are tied to revenue, reputation, operations, public trust, stakeholder approval, migration risk, campaign outcomes, or growth.
The work is out there. The problem is finding it, filtering it, and knowing which opportunities are worth your attention.
The shift
This is not a generic lead list.
The feed is designed as market intelligence for web consultants and agencies.
Some opportunities will be worth pitching immediately. Some will be worth passing on. Some will show you what kind of capabilities, partners, proof, or process you need before pursuing that kind of work.
That is part of the value.
When you study real RFPs, you see what higher-budget buyers actually ask for. You see how they describe their risks, stakeholders, approval process, technical needs, timeline, and decision criteria.
The feed helps you build a better eye for the kinds of projects your team should pursue.
How it works
A cleaner way to find and evaluate bigger-budget opportunities.
I find the opportunities.
Every week, I scan RFP databases, government portals, nonprofit boards, education sites, public procurement listings, and organization websites for relevant website, branding, and digital projects.
You get the important details.
Each opportunity is summarized with the buyer, scope, budget, deadline, submission path, and notes on why the project may be worth studying or pitching.
Your team chooses what to pursue.
Pitch the right projects, pass on poor fits, partner when needed, and use the rest as market research for the kinds of work you want to win more often.
Inside each listing
Enough context to make a faster decision.
Project details
- Project title
- Organization name
- Budget range, when available
- Conservative estimate, when useful
- Deadline and location
- Direct RFP or application link
Evaluation notes
- Scope summary
- Submission requirements
- Project-fit notes
- Potential constraints
- What makes it worth studying
- What kind of team may be needed
Why it matters
Bigger budgets usually come with bigger stakes.
A $30K website project is not just a bigger version of a $3K website project.
A smaller project may be about getting a clean, professional website online. A higher-budget project may be tied to sales, donors, public trust, operations, accessibility, migration risk, enrollment, fundraising, campaign performance, or organizational growth.
When your team sees enough real opportunities, you start to recognize the patterns. You see what buyers value. You see what they fear. You see what they need to trust before selecting a partner.
That makes you better at qualifying, positioning, proposing, and deciding which opportunities are worth the effort.
Recent examples
The kind of opportunities that show up in the feed.
Website redesign services for a public-facing organization
Reputation, accessibility, stakeholder review, and content structure.
Website migration and redesign for an established site
Content preservation, SEO, redirects, launch planning, and QA.
Nonprofit website redesign with ecommerce functionality
Mission, donations, product sales, trust, and operational clarity.
Airport website redesign and modernization
Public information, usability, compliance, and ongoing content needs.
Economic development website modernization and corridor branding
Stakeholders, public trust, messaging, and place-based identity.
Technical assistance portal design and implementation
Resource access, user journeys, workflows, and operational support.
14-day free trial
A weekly feed of serious website opportunities.
Get a cleaner view of website, branding, redesign, migration, and digital RFPs without digging through scattered portals yourself.
Use it to find opportunities, study the market, qualify projects faster, and decide which RFPs are worth your team’s attention.
- Curated $10K+ website, branding, and digital RFPs
- Budget ranges when published
- Conservative estimates when budgets are not listed
- Deadlines, scopes, and submission links
- Project-fit and market notes
- Updated weekly
- Cancel anytime
Questions
Read this before joining.
Is this only for Squarespace projects?
No. This is not a Squarespace-only feed.
Most bigger-budget website RFPs are platform-neutral, WordPress-oriented, custom-development-oriented, or open to recommendations from the selected partner. The feed is for web consultants and agencies who want to find and study bigger-budget website opportunities regardless of platform.
Who is this best for?
Web consultants, small agencies, independent studios, digital strategists, and service providers who already understand website projects and want a better way to find and evaluate serious opportunities.
It can also work for solo consultants with a contractor bench or partner network.
How many RFPs do you send each week?
The number varies. Some weeks have more relevant opportunities than others. I would rather send fewer strong opportunities than fill the feed with junk.
Are the budgets always confirmed?
When a budget is published, I include it. When a budget is not published, I may include a conservative estimate based on the scope, organization type, and project requirements.
Are these exclusive opportunities?
No. These are public opportunities, so other firms may be pursuing them too. The advantage is not exclusivity. The advantage is having a cleaner, faster way to find, study, and evaluate relevant opportunities.
Are these only for agencies?
No. Some opportunities may be a fit for solo consultants or small teams. Others may require a partner, specialist, or agency structure. The feed helps you decide whether to pitch, pass, partner, or study.
Can I cancel anytime?
Yes. You can cancel anytime.