ForumBuildersLab
Contact / Send A Brief

Write us a note. We reply fast.

Quick questions, custom scopes, partnership notes — drop a brief and a reply lands inside one business day. No call-funnels, no account managers, no waiting room.

One-business-day reply No call funnels Direct to the build team
An envelope and letter on a desk
Compose Your Brief Open · One business day reply
FBL

New Message

To · The Studio

Secured

A few sentences is plenty. Treat it like an email to a colleague.

Encrypted in flight

What Makes A Good Brief

Skip the call. Send the context.

The sharper the brief, the sharper the reply. A handful of things to include — none mandatory, all helpful.

01

The niche

Who your community is for. One sentence is plenty.

02

Member shape

Free, paid, mixed — and a rough sense of scale.

03

Monetisation model

Free, paid, freemium, or something hybrid.

04

Platforms you have tried

What worked, what didn't, what you run today.

05

The outcome you want

A clear picture of what success looks like later on.

After You Hit Send

What happens on our side.

A predictable path from your message to a real reply.

I Within minutes

Received

Your brief arrives in the studio inbox and the order chat opens if you have one.

II Within hours

Read by a human

A studio member reads end to end — no bot triage, no chatbot intake form.

III One-day reply

Reply or call

You get a written reply with next steps. If a call helps, we propose times.

IV In writing

Scope agreed

Once scope is clear we send a fixed-price quote in writing before any work begins.

Inbox Etiquette

What we love and what we won't reply to.

A short, honest list. Save yourself a wait.

We Reply Fast To
  • Project briefs with niche and member shape in plain language
  • Pricing or scope questions before you order
  • Migration enquiries from another community tool
  • Partnership proposals with a specific use case
  • Custom-scope quotes for hybrid builds
We Won't Reply To
  • Mass cold pitches and SEO link exchanges
  • "Quick chat?" notes with no context
  • Guest-post or sponsored-content requests
  • Vendor sales pitches for tools we did not ask about
  • Recruitment outreach unrelated to community work