{"id":4283,"date":"2026-07-12T22:41:57","date_gmt":"2026-07-12T22:41:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/?p=4283"},"modified":"2026-07-11T08:57:09","modified_gmt":"2026-07-11T08:57:09","slug":"ueni-7-day-process","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/zh\/ueni-7-day-process\/","title":{"rendered":"How UENI Builds Your Website in 7 Days (Process Revealed) \ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Seven days. That is UENI&#39;s promise \u2014 from your questionnaire to a live, professional website in one week. But what actually happens during those seven days? \ud83e\udd14<\/p>\n<p>Today, the full process, revealed. Who does what, day by day, and how you get the best possible result from their team. Let&#39;s pull back the curtain. \ud83d\udc47<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u26a0\ufe0f <strong>\u4fe1\u606f\u62ab\u9732\u53ca\u51c6\u786e\u6027\u8bf4\u660e\uff1a<\/strong> Some links are affiliate links \u2014 I may earn a commission at <strong>no extra cost to you<\/strong>\u3002 \u7279\u5f81 <strong>change<\/strong> \u2014 confirm on the <a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.com\/en-us\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">official UENI site<\/a>.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<div style=\"margin:26px 0;padding:24px 26px;border-radius:16px;background:linear-gradient(135deg,rgba(255,90,60,.22),rgba(255,138,91,.14));border:1px solid rgba(255,255,255,.16);text-align:center\">\n<p style=\"font-size:18px;font-weight:800;margin:0 0 14px;color:#fff\">\ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f Start your 7-day build today<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.sjv.io\/3JQEAX\" style=\"display:inline-block;background:linear-gradient(110deg,#FF5A3C,#FF8A5B);color:#fff;padding:14px 36px;border-radius:50px;font-weight:800;text-decoration:none;font-size:16px\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Start My 7-Day Build \u2192<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/07\/ueni-ad2.png\" alt=\"UENI builds your website in 7 days \u2014 the process revealed\"><\/p>\n<h2>\ud83d\udccc \u4e3b\u8981\u6536\u83b7<\/h2>\n<ul>\n<li>\ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f From questionnaire to live site in <strong>7\u5929<\/strong> \u2014 a refined assembly line, not guesswork.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udc77 A <strong>team<\/strong> handles it: designers, copywriters, and SEO specialists.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83e\uddd1 Your total effort is a <strong>30-minute questionnaire<\/strong> + a launch call.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83c\udfc6 The <strong>quality of your answers and photos<\/strong> decides the quality of your site.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h2>Before Day 1: the questionnaire \ud83d\udcdd<\/h2>\n<p>It all starts with you. Fifteen to thirty minutes. This is the <strong>blueprint<\/strong> of everything.<\/p>\n<p>They ask what your business does, your services, your area, your hours, your style preferences, your photos, and your contact details. Think of it like briefing a contractor before they build your house. Vague brief \u2192 generic house. Detailed brief \u2192 custom-feeling result. This is the single highest-leverage half hour in the whole process. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/how-to-get-started-with-ueni\/\">getting-started guide<\/a> shows how to nail it.<\/p>\n<h2>Day 1 \u2014 Intake &amp; setup \ud83d\udee0\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>Your answers land with the production team. Your domain gets sorted (included, or connected if you own one). Hosting is provisioned. Security certificates are prepared. The boring plumbing of a website \u2014 handled without you knowing it exists. \u2699\ufe0f<\/p>\n<h2>Days 2\u20133 \u2014 Design \ud83c\udfa8<\/h2>\n<p>A designer shapes your site from professional templates \u2014 colors and style matched to your business type, your logo placed, your photos arranged, pages structured (Home, Services, About, Contact, and more if needed).<\/p>\n<p>This is why the result looks coherent: <strong>one trained person makes the calls<\/strong>, instead of a tired owner guessing at midnight. \ud83c\udfa8<\/p>\n<h2>Days 3\u20134 \u2014 Copywriting \u270d\ufe0f (the underrated superstar)<\/h2>\n<p>A copywriter turns your questionnaire answers into real website text \u2014 services described clearly, value explained simply, calls to action placed where they convert.<\/p>\n<p>Here is the truth: <strong>words sell more than design does.<\/strong> Most DIY sites fail on words, not looks. Having a professional write yours is quietly the best part of the deal. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-review-2026\/\">\u5b8c\u6574\u8bc4\u6d4b<\/a> covers why. Here is where your week goes \ud83d\udc47<\/p>\n<p><svg viewbox=\"0 0 760 250\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\" role=\"img\" aria-label=\"The 7-day build timeline\">\n  <g font-family=\"Segoe UI, sans-serif\" fill=\"#cfd2de\" font-size=\"13\">\n    <text x=\"380\" y=\"24\" text-anchor=\"middle\" fill=\"#fff\" font-weight=\"800\" font-size=\"15\">The UENI 7-day build \ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f<\/text>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"60\">\ud83d\udcdd Day 0 \u00b7 Questionnaire (you)<\/text><rect x=\"300\" y=\"48\" width=\"410\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"300\" y=\"48\" width=\"60\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#37c978\"\/>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"90\">\ud83d\udee0\ufe0f Day 1 \u00b7 Intake &#038; setup<\/text><rect x=\"300\" y=\"78\" width=\"410\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"300\" y=\"78\" width=\"100\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#FF5A3C\"\/>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"120\">\ud83c\udfa8 Days 2\u20133 \u00b7 Design<\/text><rect x=\"300\" y=\"108\" width=\"410\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"360\" y=\"108\" width=\"140\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#FF5A3C\"\/>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"150\">\u270d\ufe0f Days 3\u20134 \u00b7 Copywriting<\/text><rect x=\"300\" y=\"138\" width=\"410\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"430\" y=\"138\" width=\"140\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#f59e0b\"\/>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"180\">\ud83d\udd0e Days 4\u20135 \u00b7 SEO setup<\/text><rect x=\"300\" y=\"168\" width=\"410\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"500\" y=\"168\" width=\"120\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#a855f7\"\/>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"210\">\ud83d\ude80 Day 7 \u00b7 Launch call (you)<\/text><rect x=\"300\" y=\"198\" width=\"410\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"650\" y=\"198\" width=\"60\" height=\"15\" rx=\"7\" fill=\"#37c978\"\/>\n  <\/g>\n<\/svg><\/p>\n<div style=\"margin:26px 0;padding:22px 26px;border-radius:16px;background:linear-gradient(135deg,rgba(255,138,91,.18),rgba(255,90,60,.18));border:1px solid rgba(255,255,255,.16);text-align:center\">\n<p style=\"font-size:17px;font-weight:800;margin:0 0 12px;color:#fff\">\ud83d\udca1 A team does the work while you run your business<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.sjv.io\/3JQEAX\" style=\"display:inline-block;background:linear-gradient(110deg,#FF8A5B,#FF5A3C);color:#fff;padding:12px 32px;border-radius:50px;font-weight:700;text-decoration:none\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Begin My Build \u2192<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Days 4\u20135 \u2014 SEO setup \ud83d\udd0e<\/h2>\n<p>The SEO basics get wired in \u2014 page titles and descriptions, clean structure Google can crawl, mobile optimization, speed and security checks, and service pages built to match real local searches. It ships <strong>SEO-ready<\/strong> so Google can find and understand you from day one. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-seo-google-ranking\/\">UENI SEO \u8bc4\u6d4b<\/a> \u66f4\u6df1\u5165\u4e00\u4e9b\u3002<\/p>\n<h2>Days 5\u20136 \u2014 Assembly &amp; quality checks \u2705<\/h2>\n<p>Design, text, forms, and features come together. Contact forms are tested. Booking is set up if your plan includes it. The mobile view is checked \u2014 because most of your visitors are on phones. The site is staged and ready for your eyes. \ud83d\udcf1<\/p>\n<h2>Day 7 \u2014 The launch call \ud83d\udcde (your moment)<\/h2>\n<p>A real person walks you through the finished site, page by page. <strong>This is your revision round<\/strong> \u2014 come prepared. Want a photo swapped? A price fixed? A sentence changed? Say it now. They also train you on the simple editor for small future changes. Then \u2014 live. Domain connected, site published, business online. \ud83c\udf89<\/p>\n<h2>After Day 7 \u2014 the part people forget \ud83c\udf0d<\/h2>\n<p>On Launch, you get 30 days of done-for-you edits \u2014 use them to polish. On Plus, edits are unlimited forever. And remember: <strong>share your link everywhere<\/strong> \u2014 Google profile, socials, email signature. A website nobody finds earns nothing. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-google-business-profile\/\">Google Business Profile guide<\/a> \u663e\u793a\u672c\u5730\u7ec4\u5408\u3002<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/07\/ueni-cards.png\" alt=\"Seven days from questionnaire to a live professional site\"><\/p>\n<h2>The question behind the question \u2753<\/h2>\n<p>When people ask how UENI builds a website in seven days, the question underneath is usually not logistical curiosity but a quiet suspicion \u2014 surely something this fast must be cutting a corner somewhere \u2014 and the most useful thing this reveal can do is name where the corner-cutting genuinely is not. The speed does not come from skipping the copywriting; a human writes your text, which is why the words read like a business rather than a template. It does not come from skipping design judgment; a person shapes the layout to your trade and materials, which is why the results cohere. It does not come from automation replacing the launch conversation; a human walks you through the finished site and changes it live. What the speed comes from \u2014 the only place it comes from \u2014 is the removal of the waiting that dominates every traditional build: the freelancer&#39;s queue, the agency&#39;s meeting cadence, the DIY owner&#39;s postponed evenings. Strip the waiting out of a website project and what remains, the actual skilled work, fits comfortably inside a week when specialists run it back to back. That is the honest answer to the suspicious version of the question, and it reframes the seven days from a red flag into what it actually is: evidence of a process that respects your time because it has already eliminated the waste in its own.<\/p>\n<h2>Inside the handoffs: what each specialist inherits \ud83e\udde9<\/h2>\n<p>One under-appreciated virtue of the staged process is how each specialist inherits and builds on the previous station&#39;s work, because the handoffs are where a production system quietly outperforms improvisation. The designer does not start from a blank canvas but from your questionnaire&#39;s business type, style preferences, and photo set, which means layout decisions are made against real content rather than placeholder boxes \u2014 the reverse of the DIY experience, where owners design empty frames first and then discover their actual text and images fight the layout. The copywriter inherits a designed structure with known slots \u2014 a headline of roughly this length, three service blurbs, a closing call to action \u2014 and writes to fit, which is why the words and design cohere instead of colliding. The SEO pass inherits finished pages with real text, so titles and descriptions are written against actual content rather than guessed in advance and patched later. And the quality check inherits a complete assembly, testing forms and mobile rendering on the true final product rather than a draft that will change again. Each station&#39;s output is the next station&#39;s input, and the discipline of that chain is precisely what a solo builder \u2014 professional or amateur \u2014 cannot replicate while wearing every hat at once: somewhere, some handoff to their future self gets skipped, and the seams show. When your finished site feels coherent in a way that is hard to articulate, this chain is usually why; coherence is not a design flourish but the residue of a process where nothing was built against imaginary content.<\/p>\n<h2>How to get the BEST result \ud83c\udfc6<\/h2>\n<ol>\n<li>\ud83d\udcdd <strong>Overdeliver on the questionnaire<\/strong> \u2014 the copywriter can only cook with what you provide.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udcf8 <strong>Send real photos<\/strong> \u2014 they beat stock every time.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83c\udfaf <strong>Name a site you like<\/strong> for style direction.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udcde <strong>Treat the launch call like an inspection<\/strong> \u2014 bring a list.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udd01 <strong>Use your edit window hard<\/strong> \u2014 a second pass makes good sites great.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<h2>Why the assembly line beats the lone artisan here \ud83c\udfed<\/h2>\n<p>The seven-day promise sounds implausible to anyone who has heard freelancer timelines of six weeks, so it is worth explaining the structural reason the speed is real rather than corner-cutting, because the explanation also predicts the quality. A lone freelancer building your site is a generalist context-switching between every discipline \u2014 design one hour, copy the next, hosting configuration after lunch \u2014 and between every client, with your project queuing behind whoever shouted loudest this week; the six-week timeline is mostly waiting, not working. A production system dissolves both problems at once: specialists who do only their one step, all day, every day, get faster and better at it than any generalist can, and a pipeline processing hundreds of sites weekly has no queue in the freelancer sense \u2014 your build enters a machine that is always running rather than a to-do list that is always slipping. This is the same industrial logic that lets a factory assemble in hours what a craftsman builds in weeks, and it carries the same quality implication people often get backwards: repetition does not degrade output, it standardizes it, sanding away the variance that makes freelance results a lottery. The seven days are not seven days of frantic effort on your site; they are your site&#39;s orderly passage through stations that each perform a practiced operation \u2014 which is precisely why the timeline holds at volume, why the results are consistent enough to sustain a 4.8-star average across thousands of reviews, and why the sub-one-week delivery that sounds like a gimmick is actually the most ordinary thing about the whole service: it is simply what specialization looks like from the customer&#39;s side. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-vs-web-designer\/\">UENI vs web designer guide<\/a> contrasts the two models in full.<\/p>\n<h2>What can stretch the timeline \u2014 and how to prevent it \u23f0<\/h2>\n<p>Honesty requires saying that seven days is the smooth-path figure, and the smooth path depends partly on you, so here are the realistic ways builds stretch and the trivially easy preventions for each. The most common stretcher is the incomplete questionnaire: missing services, absent photos, or contact details left blank force the team to pause and chase you, and every round-trip of chasing adds days \u2014 prevented entirely by finishing the form in one sitting and attaching your photos before submitting. The second is slow replies during the build week: if a clarifying question sits in your inbox for three days, your site sits with it \u2014 prevented by watching your email that week and answering same-day, a courtesy that costs minutes. The third is launch-call rescheduling: the call is the gate to going live, and every postponement moves the finish line by definition \u2014 prevented by booking it like a customer appointment and defending the slot. The fourth, rarer, is unusual scope \u2014 a site needing many extra pages or special arrangements may be quoted differently up front, which is a conversation rather than a delay. Notice the pattern: the machine&#39;s stations run on schedule; the variance lives almost entirely in the handoffs that involve you, which means the seven-day figure is less a promise the company makes than a collaboration you either enable or friction. Owners who prepare photos in advance, answer promptly, and hold their call slot routinely see the smooth path; owners who treat the week as fire-and-forget occasionally rediscover that even an assembly line cannot install answers you have not provided.<\/p>\n<h2>Your calendar during the week, hour by hour \ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>Prospective buyers consistently overestimate what the build week will demand of them, so it is worth publishing the honest owner-side calendar, because its lightness is the entire point of the model. Day zero costs you the thirty-to-forty focused minutes of the questionnaire plus whatever photo-gathering you wisely did in advance \u2014 call it an hour of real engagement, done once, ideally in a quiet evening sitting. Days one through six cost you approximately nothing: the realistic obligations are watching your inbox for a possible clarifying question and answering it same-day if it comes, which for most builds means zero to ten minutes total across the whole stretch. Day seven costs you the launch call \u2014 typically well under an hour \u2014 plus the ten preparatory minutes of walking your staged site with a notepad beforehand, which this series recommends because prepared owners extract visibly better final results from the same call. That is the entire invoice: roughly two hours of attention spread across a week, most of it front-loaded into one evening, none of it technical. Compare that against the twenty-to-forty-hour ledger of the DIY route or the weeks of brief-writing and feedback rounds a freelancer engagement demands, and the process&#39;s real product comes into focus \u2014 not merely a website, but a website whose acquisition cost in your scarcest currency rounds to a single sitting. Owners who grasp this in advance stop budgeting dread for the project and simply book the evening, which is, in the end, all the project ever needed from them.<\/p>\n<h2>\u5e38\u89c1\u95ee\u9898\u2753<\/h2>\n<p><strong>How long does UENI take?<\/strong><br \/>\nSeven days from when you finish your questionnaire. \u23f1\ufe0f<\/p>\n<p><strong>Who builds my site?<\/strong><br \/>\nA team \u2014 designers, copywriters, and SEO specialists \u2014 not a bot. \ud83d\udc77<\/p>\n<p><strong>Can I request changes?<\/strong><br \/>\nYes \u2014 at the launch call (your revision round), plus your edit window after. \u270f\ufe0f<\/p>\n<p><strong>What&#39;s my total time involved?<\/strong><br \/>\nAbout 30 minutes on the questionnaire, a few quick replies, and one launch call. Under 2 hours, ever. \ud83d\ude4c<\/p>\n<p><strong>Can it go faster than 7 days?<\/strong><br \/>\nSometimes simple sites land early, but plan on seven. \ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f<\/p>\n<h2>The week after the week: making launch count \ud83c\udf0d<\/h2>\n<p>The seven-day process ends with a live site, but the value of that site depends heavily on what you do in the seven days that follow, and treating launch week&#39;s sequel with equal seriousness is what separates owners who see fast results from those who wonder why the phone stayed quiet. The site emerges from the process findable in principle but unknown in fact: Google has not yet indexed it deeply, no one has linked to it, and your customers do not know it exists \u2014 all of which the second week fixes cheaply. The essential moves are by now familiar to readers of this series but bear compressing into a checklist: claim and complete your Google Business Profile and link it to the new site, since that pairing activates the map visibility where local customers actually look; broadcast the address everywhere your business already touches people \u2014 social bios, email signatures, invoices, the van, the counter; submit your first review requests to two or three recent happy customers so the site launches into social proof rather than silence; and click through your own pages on a phone one more time, catching anything the launch call missed while the edit window still makes fixes free. None of this takes more than a couple of hours total, but the difference it makes compounds: a site launched <em>and announced<\/em> starts gathering search standing and enquiries in its first month, while a site merely launched can sit unvisited long enough to convince its owner the whole exercise failed. The build week is the team&#39;s job and they will do it on schedule; the announcement week is yours, and it is the cheaper, easier, and more neglected half of the launch. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-google-business-profile\/\">Google Business Profile guide<\/a> turns the second week into a simple routine.<\/p>\n<h2>Seven days measured against every alternative \u23f1\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>To close the timeline question properly, place the seven days in the context of what every other route actually delivers, because the comparison is starker than most buyers realize. The freelancer route averages three to eight weeks when it goes well, with the variance dominated by revision loops and the freelancer&#39;s other clients \u2014 and &quot;when it goes well&quot; is doing real work in that sentence. The agency route runs one to three months by design, its discovery phases and stakeholder reviews built for clients with committees rather than counters. The DIY route has no timeline at all in the schedule sense \u2014 it takes exactly as long as your motivation lasts, which for busy owners means somewhere between three weekends and never, with never claiming a substantial share. Against this field, a guaranteed-by-process single week is not an incremental improvement but a different category of promise: it converts &quot;getting a website&quot; from a project you manage into an appointment you keep. The business consequence matters more than the convenience: every week without a findable site is a week of searching customers lost, so compressing time-to-live from months to days has a direct revenue translation that dwarfs most other differences between the options. When people ask what they are really buying with a done-for-you service, the honest answer is threefold \u2014 the labor, the consistency, and the calendar \u2014 and for a business bleeding invisible losses every unfindable week, the calendar is frequently the most valuable of the three. Seven days is the feature; everything else is how it is achieved. And because the whole passage is wrapped by the thirty-day money-back guarantee, the week itself carries no gamble: you are not betting on the process, merely scheduling it, with the finished product yours to judge and the exit door open the entire time. A business that has postponed its website for months or years can find that framing almost disorienting \u2014 the obstacle it budgeted seasons for turns out to be an appointment it books for next week \u2014 but the disorientation passes quickly, usually around the moment the launch call ends and the site is simply, finally, live. That moment is what the seven days exist to deliver, and for the busy owners the process was designed around, it arrives with a distinct feeling that thousands of reviews describe in nearly the same words: relief that it was this easy, and mild regret at every month spent assuming it would not be. If this walkthrough has demystified the week for you, then it has done its job, and the remaining step is the one no article can take on your behalf: gather your ten photos tonight, block out thirty minutes tomorrow, and put your own business on the assembly line whose every station you now understand. Seven days from the moment you submit, the walkthrough you just read becomes the week you just had \u2014 and the website you have been meaning to get becomes, at last, the website you simply have, working for your business while you get back to running it.<\/p>\n<h2>The bottom line \ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>Seven days. Two hours of your effort, total. A refined assembly line \u2014 intake, design, copywriting, SEO, quality checks, and a launch call \u2014 that UENI runs hundreds of times a week. That is exactly why it is fast, cheap, and consistent. \ud83d\ude80<\/p>\n<p>Feed it well \u2014 good answers, real photos, show up to the call \u2014 and one week from now, your business looks legit online. Start your seven days whenever you are ready. \u2705<\/p>\n<div style=\"margin:30px 0;padding:26px;border-radius:18px;background:linear-gradient(135deg,rgba(255,90,60,.24),rgba(255,138,91,.16));border:1px solid rgba(255,255,255,.18);text-align:center\">\n<p style=\"font-size:19px;font-weight:800;margin:0 0 8px;color:#fff\">\ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f Questionnaire to live site \u2014 in 7 days<\/p>\n<p style=\"margin:0 0 16px;color:rgba(255,255,255,.85)\">From $79 setup + a monthly plan \u00b7 30-day money-back guarantee \ud83d\udee1\ufe0f<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.sjv.io\/3JQEAX\" style=\"display:inline-block;background:linear-gradient(110deg,#FF5A3C,#FF8A5B);color:#fff;padding:15px 40px;border-radius:50px;font-weight:800;text-decoration:none;font-size:17px\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Start My 7-Day Build \u2192<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<p><em>Features were accurate at the time of writing and may change \u2014 always confirm on the <a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.com\/en-us\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">official UENI site<\/a>. Affiliate links included; general information, not advice.<\/em> \u270d\ufe0f<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>How UENI builds your website in 7 days \u2014 the full process revealed. Day-by-day: questionnaire, design, copywriting, SEO, launch call. 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