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How to write down your idea so a builder can price it

Straight answer

A builder can price an idea once you have written who it is for, the problem it solves, the core action a user takes, and the handful of things it must do. Keep it to a page in plain language. Vague ideas get vague or padded quotes; a clear page gets a clear price and far fewer surprises later.

Information current as at 5 July 2026

When a builder cannot price your idea, it is usually not because they are being difficult. It is because you have handed them a cloud, not a shape. A price needs a boundary, and a boundary needs words on a page. The good news is the page is short, and writing it clears up your own thinking too.

Plain English
Brief
A short written description of your idea a builder can read, scope and quote against.
Must-have
A feature the first version genuinely cannot work without, as opposed to a nice extra.
Out of scope
The things you are deliberately leaving out of the first build, written down on purpose.
Fixed price
A quote for a clearly bounded piece of work, only possible when the scope is clear.

Step by step

  1. Start with one sentence: who, problem, actionOpen the page with a single sentence naming who it is for, the problem it solves, and the one thing they do with it. This is the spine of the whole brief. A builder reading this alone should already picture roughly what you mean and what kind of thing you are describing. If it takes a paragraph, the idea is still tangled; keep compressing until one sentence carries it, then build the rest of the page underneath it. Everything that follows is there to add detail to this one sentence, not to introduce a second or third idea alongside it.
  2. Describe the main journey in a few stepsWalk through what a user actually does, start to finish, in plain steps: they arrive, they do this, then this, and this happens. Do not describe screens or technology, describe the human path. A builder reads this to understand the real work behind the idea. A booking tool might be "they pick a time, enter their details, and get a confirmation", which quietly tells a builder about a calendar, a form, and an email.
  3. List the must-haves, separately from the nice-to-havesMake two lists. Must-haves are things the first version genuinely cannot work without. Nice-to-haves are everything you would love eventually but could launch without. Being honest about this split is the single biggest thing you can do to get an accurate price, because it lets a builder quote the small real thing rather than padding for the whole imagined thing.
  4. Write down what is deliberately out of scopeName the things you are choosing not to build yet: the mobile app, the admin dashboard, the integrations. Writing out-of-scope items down protects both sides, because it turns unspoken assumptions into agreed boundaries that neither of you can drift past by accident. Without it, a builder either quotes high to cover everything you might mean, or quotes low and hits surprises that become awkward conversations later. An explicit boundary is what makes a fixed price possible, and it is one of the kindest things you can do for the relationship.
  5. Note anything that constrains the buildAdd the practical facts a builder needs: any deadline, a rough budget range, whether it must connect to a tool you already use, and where any data lives. These constraints shape the price as much as the features do. A builder who knows you have a real deadline and a real budget can tell you honestly what fits, rather than designing something the constraints will not allow anyway. Constraints are not admissions of weakness; they are the frame that makes a sensible plan possible, and hiding them only leads to a proposal you cannot afford or a timeline you cannot meet. Be upfront, and the whole conversation becomes shorter and more useful.
No pressure
Show us what you built.

If you have made something and it needs to become real, send it over. We will tell you honestly what it needs to be live, safe and yours, whether that is a quick fix you can do or a proper build. No obligation.

Common questions

Questions, answered

How long should this document be?
One page is the target, two at the most. The value is in the clarity, not the length. A long, wandering document is harder to price than a short, sharp one, because a builder has to guess which parts are firm. If it runs long, you are probably describing several ideas and should pick one.
Should I include a budget, or will that just inflate the quote?
Include a range. A budget is a constraint that helps a builder design something that fits, not a number they simply spend up to. Withholding it usually leads to a quote for the wrong size of thing. A reputable builder uses your range to tell you honestly what is and is not possible within it.
What if I do not know the technical details?
Good, do not invent them. Describe the human problem and the journey in plain words and leave the technology to the builder, because choosing it is their job. A brief written in plain language is easier to price accurately than one full of half-right technical terms that a builder then has to unpick.
Do I need designs or wireframes to get a price?
No, though a rough sketch can help. A clear written description of the person, the problem, the journey and the must-haves is enough for a builder to scope and price. Designs come later and can even lock you in too early. Words first, pictures if they genuinely clarify something words cannot.
No pressure
Show us what you built.

If you have made something and it needs to become real, send it over. We will tell you honestly what it needs to be live, safe and yours, whether that is a quick fix you can do or a proper build. No obligation.

Start here

Two doors. Same senior team.

Whether you can name exactly what you want built, or you just know something is leaking, the next step is the same conversation.