£499 once. Optional £49/mo if you want it managed. Real working preview in 24 hours, no card. First lead in 60 days or your money back, and you keep the site.
Couples book wedding DJs eight months out, at night, from a sofa, with three tabs open. The tab that wins shows real events (your rig, real dancefloors), package prices, how the playlist conversation works, your PAT and PLI paperwork for the venue, and a date-check form. Facebook groups produce price-shoppers; search produces planners with budgets. A DJ website also rescues the corporate and school work that never posts in groups: those clients need an invoice-ready business, and looking like one online is most of the audition.
If the site doesn't put a new enquiry in your hands within 60 days of going live, you get the full £499 back. And you keep the site. That is the whole clause; there is no asterisk.
I'm Harry Yule, one developer in Manchester. I write every site by hand, at night mostly, because I watched an agency take a roofer's £1,800 for a WordPress site that never worked. No templates, no page builders, no project managers. One craftsman, your trade, your town.