Your website is losing users somewhere. I'll show you exactly where — and how to fix it.
I review your site the way an auditor reads a contract: systematically, in writing, every finding prioritized, every fix specified — whether it's a web app, a marketing site, or a sales funnel. You get a report your team can act on the same day. No calls. No workshops. No retainer.
A full audit lists 15–25 findings like these — each with a screenshot, a severity rating, and a concrete, actionable fix your team can implement directly.
Two packages. One price each. No surprises.
Every audit is fixed-scope and fixed-price, paid 50% upfront and 50% on delivery. Invoiced from Poland (EU reverse charge — zero paperwork for you).
UX Quick Check
- One key user flow of your choice — sign-up, onboarding, checkout, or lead-gen funnel
- The 10 most important issues, ranked by impact vs. effort
- Annotated screenshots with concrete, specific fixes
- One round of written follow-up questions included
Full UX Audit
- Complete heuristic review — desktop and mobile
- Performance check — Core Web Vitals and load-time quick wins
- WCAG accessibility baseline (European Accessibility Act is in force)
- 15–25 documented findings with severity and priority
- Implementation notes your developers can pick up directly
- Optional 20-min video walkthrough of key findings
- One round of written follow-up questions included
Agentic AI Readiness Check
Your next visitors won't all be human. I review how your website and customer communications perform when AI agents and assistants browse, summarize, and act on them — structured data, machine-readable flows, agent-friendly forms, and copy that survives AI summarization intact.
I take on a maximum of one Full Audit (or two Quick Checks) per month, so every report gets my full attention. Current availability is confirmed by email within 24 hours.
Advice from someone who has to live with the code.
Every fix comes with the how
I write production front-end code myself. My recommendations aren't ivory-tower — they include implementation notes your team can act on the same day, sometimes down to the exact CSS.
I optimize for humans and agents
More and more people find and evaluate services through AI assistants before they ever open your site themselves. I audit not just how people experience your site, but how AI agents read, summarize, and act on it and your communications — so you stay visible either way.
Seven years in Austria
I lived and worked in Austria — including at LOOP, the Salzburg digital agency. I know your users' quality expectations from the inside, not from a textbook.
Localized UX is my day job
As Product Owner of GrowPoint, a multilingual Learning & Content Management SaaS, I handle localized flows and translation workflows daily. If your product serves several markets, I'll spot what others miss.
Three steps. Your total time investment: about five minutes.
You fill in a short questionnaire
Five minutes: what you've built, your audience, your biggest worries. You send me a link — and test access if there's a login. That's the last thing I need from you.
I analyze — you do nothing
No kickoff call, no check-ins, no status meetings. I work asynchronously and confirm the delivery date in writing.
You receive the report on the agreed date
A link and PDF with prioritized findings, annotated screenshots, and implementation notes — plus one round of written follow-up questions if anything is unclear.
An audit is a sharp tool. Make sure it's the right one.
I'd rather you skip the audit than pay for a report that sits in a drawer. Here's an honest breakdown.
This will pay for itself
- You have a live site or product (or a staging build) with real users or a launch date
- You suspect your funnel — sign-up, checkout, lead form — is leaking users but can't pinpoint where
- You have a developer — in-house or freelance — who can implement fixes
- You want an outside expert's written verdict before investing in a redesign
Your money is better spent elsewhere
- Your product is still an idea or a wireframe — you need design, not an audit
- You have almost no traffic yet — fix acquisition first, then conversion
- You want someone to redesign and rebuild the product — I diagnose and specify; your team implements
- You need workshops and stakeholder alignment — this is a written, async service by design
The auditor
UX designer, front-end developer, product owner.
I've spent 20+ years building for the web — first as a front-end developer at LOOP in Salzburg, today as IT team lead at the non-profit DeoLink and Product Owner of GrowPoint, a multilingual Learning & Content Management SaaS platform. I've sat on every side of the table: designing the flow, writing the code, and owning the roadmap that has to justify both.
That's exactly what an audit needs. A pure designer will tell you what's wrong; a pure developer will tell you what's expensive. I tell you what's wrong, what it costs to fix, and in which order — so a small team gets the maximum result from a limited budget.
The things people email me before booking.
Why no meetings? What if I need to explain my product?
The questionnaire covers what a kickoff call would — in ten minutes instead of sixty, and in writing, so nothing gets lost. If something is genuinely unclear on either side, we resolve it by email before the audit starts.
Async isn't a limitation — it's why the price is fixed and the deadline holds.
What access do you need?
For a public website or funnel, usually just the URL. If your product has logins, a test account with the same permissions as a typical customer — for the Full Audit, ideally on both staging and production. I never touch real customer data, and I'll sign your NDA before you send anything.
What does a "finding" actually look like?
Each one has a screenshot, a severity rating (like the High/Med tags in the example above), what the problem costs you, and a concrete fix — often down to the exact copy or CSS. Findings are ordered by impact vs. effort, so your team starts at the top and works down.
Do you implement the fixes too?
No — and that's deliberate. An auditor who sells the renovation has an incentive to find problems. The report is specified so any front-end developer can implement it directly. If a finding turns out to be ambiguous, the included round of follow-up questions covers it.
What if the audit finds nothing serious?
It hasn't happened yet — every product accumulates friction. But if I genuinely can't find enough substance to justify the report after the first day of review, I'll tell you, refund the deposit, and you've lost nothing but one email.
How does payment and invoicing work?
50% deposit to confirm your slot, 50% on delivery. I invoice from Poland with EU reverse charge, so if you're a VAT-registered business in the EU there's zero tax paperwork on your side. Bank transfer, 14-day terms.
Send me a link to your site.
Two sentences are enough: what you've built, and what worries you. I'll reply within 24 hours with availability and a recommendation for which package fits.
Reports in English · Invoiced from Poland (EU, reverse charge)