Process · 48 hours, zero meetings

From brief to live ads in 48 hours.

A step-by-step breakdown of what actually happens between "I want to work with you" and "the creatives are in your Figma." No kickoff calls unless you want one.

  1. Day 1, Hour 1

    Brief submitted

    You fill out the brief form in ~10 minutes: goals, product photos, examples that worked before, timeline. No kickoff call required.

  2. Day 1, Hour 6

    Invoice + work starts

    I review the brief, confirm scope and timeline, send the invoice. Once payment clears, I start designing the same day.

  3. Day 2

    First draft delivered

    A shareable Figma link lands in your inbox. Real designs, not mood boards. Leave comments directly on the file.

  4. Day 2–3

    Revisions

    You comment, I edit. Same person reads your feedback and applies it. Same-day turnaround on changes. Two rounds on Rapid, three on Scale.

  5. Day 3

    Final files

    All formats delivered: platform-specific exports (9:16, 4:5, 1:1, 16:9), master Figma file, and commercial-rights confirmation. Upload to Meta/TikTok, start testing immediately.

Why this is 10× faster than an agency

No discovery workshop

You already know your product. Your brief is your kickoff. I read it, I ask two clarifying questions in email, I start.

No internal approvals

Agencies have creative directors reviewing junior designers reviewing senior designers. Here there's just me. Nothing waits in queue.

No status meetings

Weekly status calls exist to reassure clients during slow execution. When you see drafts in 24 hours, you don't need them.

What I need from you

  • 1.
    Clear brief. Product, goal, platform, any examples that worked. 10 minutes in the form.
  • 2.
    Assets. Product photos, logo, brand colors. Google Drive or Dropbox link is fine.
  • 3.
    Fast feedback. If you sit on Round 1 for 4 days, the 48-hour clock stretches. Plan for ~1 hour of your time for comments.
  • 4.
    One decision-maker. Feedback from five stakeholders is how agencies die slow. Pick one person who can say yes/no.

Start the 48-hour clock

Fill out the brief and we're already halfway through Day 1.

Start a Project →