I make websites for small businesses. Think of me as the friend who actually knows how to do this stuff — minus the agency invoice.
"You don't need a $10,000 agency. You need someone who gives a damn about your business and knows how to build a site. That's the whole pitch."
My first trade was graphic design — learned the fundamentals at CCTS Sicklerville. From there I spent years building things for my own businesses, which meant learning what actually works on the web vs. what just sounds good in a pitch deck.
I tried every "easy" website builder out there. They all hit a wall eventually. So I went back to the basics: HTML and CSS, from scratch. That's when things clicked — fast sites, full flexibility, no platform holding anyone hostage.
NickMakesWebsites is new, and I'll own that. But it means you're getting someone who's still hungry — who actually reads your emails, picks up your calls, and cares whether your site works. That's not a phase. That's the whole point.
A website that exists beats a perfect one that doesn't.
Done beats theoretical. We launch something real, then make it better. "Still working on it" doesn't get you customers.
You should be able to text your web person.
No ticket systems. No "our team will get back to you." Direct line. Real answers. I'm the one building it and I'm the one you talk to.
Affordable doesn't mean cheap.
No office rent, no account managers, no markup. You pay for skill. The result looks the same — the invoice doesn't.
You're buying peace of mind. The tech is handled. Someone's watching it. You can go back to running your business.
It gets done.
Real timeline, real launch date. Not "we're making progress" for three months.
You understand it.
Plain English explanations. No jargon, no confusion, no feeling like you're being talked past.
It keeps working.
Updates, backups, fixes — it doesn't go dark the minute the invoice is paid.
Book a 20-minute call. No pitch, no pressure — just a real conversation about what you need and whether I'm the right fit.