Get the intake-to-handoff fix for $29.
This is the first paid OpsKit test: one narrow workflow pack for one repeated operator headache — getting a lead from “it came in” to “the right person clearly owns the next step” without the spreadsheet-doc-Slack cleanup loop.
One-time purchase. No subscription. Not a bloated ops platform. A faster first fix for a workflow your team already knows is messy.
This is priced to be easier to try than to keep tolerating.
The recurring mess you are paying for now
A lead arrives. Intake details are incomplete. Clarifications happen in Slack. Ownership gets decided late. Delivery context gets rebuilt from memory. The team spends more time recovering the handoff than moving the work forward.
That is the problem this pack is trying to relieve first.
Not workflow transformation. Not broad automation. Just a cleaner first run for one recurring mess.
If this saves even one messy handoff, it can pay for itself fast
The first OpsKit pack is not priced like a giant system because it is not trying to be one. It is a small one-time fix for a workflow that quietly leaks time every week.
Most agencies do not lose hours to one dramatic process collapse. They lose time to the smaller, repeatable mess: a lead comes in, context gets scattered, ownership gets clarified too late, and someone has to reconstruct what should have already been obvious.
The first OpsKit pack is $29 one time.
So the question is not whether this replaces an ops team. The question is simpler: is your current intake-to-handoff mess costing more than $29 in avoidable cleanup, delay, and back-and-forth?
For most teams feeling this problem already, the answer is yes.
You do not need another template library. You need this workflow to stop being messy.
Large template hubs and tool ecosystems create choice. They also create setup work, adaptation work, and one more round of “which version should we use?”
OpsKit is intentionally narrower. One recurring workflow pain. One pack that already points to the first run. One first-week win you can try without shopping through a broad automation catalog.
You could build this yourself. The question is whether you want to keep paying for the mess first.
Yes — you could recreate a version of this internally.
You could ask ChatGPT for a checklist, open a spreadsheet, make another internal doc, or start a DIY automation that stalls halfway.
But that is usually not the real choice.
The real choice is: keep spending time on repeated handoff cleanup, keep delaying a cleaner next-owner step, keep reconstructing context that should already be clear, or spend $29 once on a starting fix you can use now.
The first OpsKit pack is not priced to replace your whole ops system. It is priced to make one repeated workflow problem easier to stop tolerating.
This is not another blank starting point. It is a faster first fix.
What happens in your first run
The buyer path is designed to create one immediate workflow win, not leave the pack sitting unused after checkout.
- open the pack on the next real lead instead of waiting for a perfect rollout
- capture the lead details that normally get scattered
- assign the next owner immediately with the routing map
- use the handoff checklist before the work moves forward
The goal is one cleaner live handoff this week, not another internal system project.
Get a low-risk fix for the intake-to-handoff mess
The first OpsKit pack is built for small agency operators who want cleaner lead intake, clearer next-owner routing, and less weekly handoff cleanup — without signing up for another platform.
- structured lead intake format
- next-owner routing map
- handoff checklist for clean context transfer
- lightweight admin-cost calculator tied to the workflow
- short usage notes
Best fit / not fit
Best fit: small agency operators and lean client-service teams who already feel the drag between lead intake and the right next owner.
Not for: teams shopping for a full platform, massive template universe, or broad automation rebuild.
This does not need to save much time to be worth trying
At $29 one time, the first OpsKit pack only needs to reduce a small amount of repeated admin drag to make sense.
If your team regularly loses even a short block of time to handoff confusion, unclear routing, or context cleanup, the current workflow may already be costing more than the price of the pack.
That is the point of the first offer: a low-risk fix for a problem that keeps showing up anyway.
Reserve your spot
Spend $29 once and get a faster, clearer way to move a lead from “it came in” to “the right person owns the next step” without another week of handoff cleanup.
This is not another blank starting point. It is a faster first fix.
Still deciding if the first $29 pack is worth trying?
Here’s what to know before you buy the first OpsKit workflow pack.
What do I get for $29?
You get the first OpsKit workflow pack: Intake-to-Handoff Pack. It includes a structured lead intake format, next-owner routing map, handoff checklist, lightweight admin-cost calculator, and short usage notes.
Is this a subscription?
No. This is a one-time purchase for the first workflow pack.
Is this a platform or software subscription?
No. The first paid offer is intentionally narrow. It is a workflow pack built to help small agency operators clean up one repeated handoff problem without buying another bloated ops tool.
Who is this best for?
Small agency operators and lean client-service teams who already feel the drag between lead intake and the right next owner.
How quickly can we use it?
Fast. The first pack is designed so your team can open it, understand the workflow, and start applying a cleaner handoff process the same week.
Why is the first pack only $29?
Because this should be easy to say yes to. It is a low-risk way to fix one workflow you already know is quietly wasting time every week.