Visual Design Consultation

Ongoing Visual Design Consulting

Good visual design isn't about aesthetics alone — it's about what the design does to the person looking at it.

Ongoing Visual Design Consulting
8+ years of group practice
120+ design sessions completed
6–12 participants per group

About this session

Design decisions come up constantly during a build

A new section gets added, the layout breaks on mobile, the client wants a different color — and suddenly you are making visual decisions without a clear reference point.

How ongoing consulting is different

Rather than one isolated session, you have access to a consistent visual design perspective throughout the month. Questions get answered before they become problems.

What this covers

  • Async reviews of design work in progress — mockups, screenshots, staging links
  • Written feedback with specific suggestions, not vague critique
  • One 45-minute call per month for bigger decisions or direction setting
  • A shared reference document updated as visual decisions are made

Realistic expectations

This works well when you have a developer or designer actively building and need someone to check visual consistency. It is not a substitute for having a designer do the work.

Saoirse, a copywriter updating her portfolio site, used three months of this consulting to work through a full visual overhaul with her developer — reviewing each section before it went live.

Minimum commitment

Two months. After that, month-to-month with two weeks notice to end.

How it's structured

Monthly structure

  1. Onboarding (first month only)
    We establish your visual design goals, document existing assets, and set up a shared reference document.
  2. Async review rounds
    Submit design work for review up to 4 times per month. Turnaround is within 2 business days.
  3. Monthly call (45 minutes)
    One scheduled call to discuss direction, review bigger decisions, or plan upcoming work.
  4. Reference document updates
    All decisions made during the month are logged in your shared document so nothing is lost or forgotten.
  5. End-of-month notes
    A short written summary of what was addressed and what is pending for the next month.