Donald
👤
Anonymous
web session
⏱ Included usage
What keeps projects moving
You describe the outcome once. Donald handles the scoping, build, review, and handoff in the background so you can stay focused on the result.
Donald Guest workspace
Start with a real outcome
Describe the result. Get to something people can open.
Donald works best when the first ask is concrete, visible, and easy to judge. Start with one page, one tool, one workflow, or one prototype that can be reviewed today.
No long setup
Private saved workspace
Visible progress
Plain-English revisions
What makes this feel good fast
Do not start with “build my whole startup.” Ask for one thing a real person can open and react to in minutes. The strongest starts are landing pages, service sites, internal tools, calculators, and clickable product drafts.
Fastest win
1 clear ask
The first project should be small enough to judge without a meeting.
Normal flow
brief → draft
Say what should exist, then react to a working version instead of planning forever.
Best first step
Ask for one thing a customer, investor, teammate, or client can open and judge in minutes.
What you see
Progress, drafts, and project history stay organized instead of disappearing in chat.
How to win
Say who it is for, what should exist, and what “ready to share” should feel like.
Fast brief formula
1. Audience
Who is this for?
Example: early-stage founders pitching investors.
2. Outcome
What should exist?
Example: a polished landing page with pricing, FAQ, and email capture.
3. Standard
What does ready feel like?
Example: credible, clear, and ready to send this week.
Easiest possible start
Paste one clear message and let Donald shape the rest.
Copy-and-send
Build me a polished website for my business. It is for busy people comparing options quickly. Include a clear headline, what we offer, pricing, testimonials, FAQ, and a way to contact or book. Make it feel trustworthy and ready to share this week.
Pick your starting lane
What you can drop in without overthinking it
Rough notesA messy paragraph is enough if it explains the audience, offer, or problem.
Links you likeCompetitors, references, or examples help Donald match the level and direction faster.
Screenshots or docsExisting pages, deck screenshots, and product notes are useful starting material.
One hard constraintThings like “must feel premium” or “must work for homeowners” make the first draft sharper.
1
Describe the resultSay what should exist when the work is done, who it is for, and what “ready” should feel like.
2
Donald turns it into a live projectYou can follow progress, answer quick questions, and keep the work moving without learning the internals.
3
Review and refineOpen the project, ask for changes in plain English, and iterate until it feels ready to share.
Most popular starts
Best results: include who it is for, what it should do, and what “ready to share” means. Rough notes, screenshots, competitor links, and sketches all help.
You can paste rough notes, attach screenshots, or drop competitor links without writing a full spec.
Start small, then react to something real. Ask for one page, one workflow, one prototype, or one revision. Donald keeps the project, progress, and follow-up requests organized as the work moves.
Best first ask
Something a real person can open and judge today.
What happens next
Brief, build, review, and revisions stay tied to the same project.
Up next
Next
Scope