Start with the problem, not a price sheet.
Gorton Solutions covers a wide range of work: board repair, websites, custom databases, automation, engagement games, parts sourcing, and one-off builds. Most projects need a quick intake before a fair quote makes sense.
Serving Blue Ridge, GA and nearby areas. Remote planning, websites, and software work can often start online.
What are you trying to do?
Fix something
Electronics repair, board diagnostics, data recovery, connector damage, power issues, and hard-to-find faults.
Build something physical
3D printed parts, enclosures, prototypes, small hardware projects, sensors, panels, and one-off assembled builds.
Build a website or app
Anything from a simple hosted info page to a custom web app, admin tool, database, booking flow, or larger platform.
Automate a workflow
Scripts, smart home setups, sensors, bots, dashboards, alerts, and integrations between tools that do not naturally talk.
Create an engagement tool
Playable games, scoreboards, rewards, feedback chat, lead hooks, customer check-ins, and recurring interaction ideas.
Figure out an idea
Scoping, parts sourcing, second opinions, build-vs-buy decisions, and practical technical planning before you spend money.
Why quotes are scoped first
A simple static website and a custom platform are both “web design,” but they are not the same job. The same is true for a loose charging port versus a board-level fault, or a basic script versus a connected automation system.
Website and software factors
- Static info page, business site, store, database, app, or networked platform
- Whether you already have logo files, colors, images, copy, and content
- Whether assets need cleanup, resizing, conversion, or redesign
- How much content you want to write versus how much you want handled for you
- Hosting, forms, accounts, analytics, admin tools, payments, email, and integrations
Repair, build, and automation factors
- Diagnostic time, parts availability, prior repair attempts, and test requirements
- Materials, quantity, design revisions, finish quality, and physical constraints
- Whether this is a one-time fix, prototype, repeatable process, or support relationship
- Travel/on-site needs, shipping, installation, and handoff documentation
- How much you want to do yourself versus how much you want me to handle
What to send first
- The goal: what should be fixed, built, automated, or figured out?
- The current state: what exists now, what is broken, and what have you already tried?
- Assets or evidence: photos, screenshots, links, model numbers, dimensions, files, logos, sketches, or examples.
- Your role: do you want to write content, gather images, provide parts, or have the whole job handled?
- Timeline and constraints: deadline, budget range if you have one, service area, shipping/on-site needs, and must-have features.
What happens next
1. Intake
You send the rough details. If something is missing, I ask focused questions instead of making assumptions.
2. Scope
We separate must-haves from nice-to-haves, identify unknowns, and choose a practical first step.
3. Quote or next action
You get a clear recommendation: quote, diagnostic path, small discovery step, or honest advice that it may not be worth doing.