The stack Work Pricing Start a project
Your marketing team of one

Full-stack marketing, run by one.

I handle the acronyms. You focus on your business. One accountable operator across the whole stack.

WIND NO-GO
Points of sail
One name. Work you own.

A marketing department looks like it needs a department. It does not. One operator, the whole stack, pulling in one direction.

Agencies split your brand across five people who never meet each other. Every handoff loses something. The strategist does not build the site. The developer never reads the positioning.

Here there is one accountable name from the first call to the weekly ship. Nothing gets lost in translation, because there is no translation.

Five layers, one operator.

The full marketing stack. Three layers I deliver with my own hands. Two I orchestrate through tooling and a partner layer, staying your single point of contact.

01

Brand

Identity, voice, and positioning that hold up everywhere they appear.

Delivered by me
02

Web

Fast sites clients edit themselves, built to be the portfolio piece.

Delivered by me
03

Content

Governed voice at volume, run through tooling and a trusted partner layer.

Orchestrated
04

Acquisition

Channels and campaigns coordinated end to end, one point of contact.

Orchestrated
05

Ops

Analytics, automations, and the pipeline that stores every lead before it sends.

Delivered by me
Brand Web Content Acquisition Ops

Solid - I build it myself. Outlined - I run it through tooling and a partner layer I coordinate.

Design Branding Web Development Automations Design Branding Web Development Automations

How it works.

Three steps. A straight read, a plan you sign off, then a week that always moves something forward.

01

A hard look

A call and a straight read of what you have built, and where it is leaking. No pitch, just the honest picture.

02

Plan first

Positioning and a plan before anything ships. You see it, you sign off, then work begins.

03

I run it

I run the stack week to week. Every week moves something forward, and you always know what.

Two clients, all five layers, live.

Both rebuilt across brand, web, content, acquisition, and ops. Both running today, both editable by the owner.

HQ Solutions, IT managed services, Bucharest

Twenty years, finally visible.

A sprawling 676-URL legacy site with no voice and no analytics, rebuilt into a fast bilingual site the client edits himself, with SEO from the ground up and a lead pipeline that stores every enquiry before it sends.

BrandWebOps
hqsolutions.ro
URZI Design, interior design, Hunedoara

A referral studio's first home.

A referral-only studio with no website got its first digital home, built to be the portfolio piece itself, with a self-run CMS. Every project shown is his, and he adds every one himself.

BrandWebCMS
urzi.design

Pricing, in the open.

Scope capped in writing. A few slots. You are never in a queue.

Tune
500/mo

Support and a foundation kept solid, plus a light monthly batch of work.

Keep it solid
Engine
1,000/mo

Cover and run it end to end. Scope agreed in writing, every month.

Run end to end
Embedded
1,500-2,500/mo

I lead it, fully owned. A few slots, for the businesses that want one operator in the seat.

Fully owned
Projects
from 1,500

One-off and done right: a brand, a site, or a launch.

One and done

Fair questions.

The ones worth asking before you hand marketing to one person.

01Is one person a single point of failure?
An agency is too, it just hides it behind a logo. Here you get one name, direct, and work you own outright. Nothing is locked in a platform you cannot leave.
02Can one person really cover all of it?
Three layers I do myself: brand, web, ops. Two I orchestrate and own: content and acquisition, run through tooling and a partner layer. You stay with one point of contact throughout.
03What happens when you are busy?
Scope is capped in writing and slots are few, on purpose. You are not one of forty accounts, and you are never sitting in a queue behind someone louder.
The idea

A single sailor can take a boat around the world alone.

Not because it is easy. Because they know every system and never wait on anyone. Marketing is not so different. It looks like it needs a department. It does not.

One operator. One direction.

Let's build the
stack together.

Send me what you have built and where it is leaking. I will send back a straight read.

Start a project daniel at crew-of-one.com