This is a consulting website example. Requests from this page go to Seth Brand at SBTC.

Approach

A steady process for firms that need sharper words and cleaner decisions.

This page exists because the site should not stop at a homepage and service list. Consulting buyers usually want to know how the work starts, how scope gets chosen, and what happens after the first conversation.

01

Start with the real problem

Broken positioning, scattered offers, weak pages, low-confidence leads, or a site that never matched the quality of the work.

02

Review what exists

Look at the pages, the sales context, the handoff points, and the places where buyer trust falls apart.

03

Choose the right scope

Sometimes the answer is a review. Sometimes it is a full rebuild. Sometimes it is a tighter service-page pass.

04

Build the pages that matter

Homepage, services, proof, insights, and contact paths should each have one clear job.

05

Keep the next step practical

A calm launch plan, realistic follow-through, and support when the site needs more than a handoff.

FAQ structure

Answer the obvious buyer questions before they have to ask them.

Is Northstar Advisory Studio a real firm?

No. It is a sample consulting brand used to present this website direction honestly.

Where do the demo forms go?

They go to Seth Brand at SBTC. The site keeps that handoff clear.

Why show fictional work summaries instead of fake testimonials?

Because the point is to show page structure and trust design without pretending the demo has a real client history.

Who is this direction for?

Founder-led consultancies, advisory firms, and service businesses that sell judgment and need a calmer, clearer website.

What should someone do if they want a site like this?

Use the contact form here or the main SBTC contact page and ask for a website review or a site in this direction.

Next

Use the process page with the contact page, not instead of it.

This page builds confidence, but it works best when the request path is just as clear as the process itself.