Send the plan instead of explaining your price.
Deliverly turns a casual request for freelance work into a professional delivery plan with scope, schedule, rate, and approval in one link. Less awkward pricing talk. More clarity.

The real problem
The work is not awkward. The money conversation is.
A friend, cousin, founder, or client asks you to build something. You want the work, but now you have to explain why it costs what it costs. Deliverly gives that conversation a professional frame: here is the scope, here is the schedule, here is the daily rate.
"So... this is my rate, and I think the total might be around..."
"Here is the delivery plan. You can review the scope, timeline, and total before we start."
How it works
A clean handoff from request to agreement.
Break the work down
Turn a vague request into concrete deliverables, descriptions, and dates.
Show the rate plainly
Present your work-day rate and total without making the conversation personal.
Send one professional link
Clients review, accept, decline, or request additions from a polished plan page.

The product
Your quote becomes a plan clients can act on.
Deliverly is built around the pieces clients need to trust a freelance engagement: what they get, when they get it, what it costs, and what happens next.
Timeline-first planning
Map each deliverable to start and end dates so clients understand the effort behind the quote.
Change requests built in
Clients can ask for additions without derailing the entire conversation into scattered messages.
A real freelancer profile
Your availability, reviews, and project history reinforce that this is professional work.
Progress after approval
Once accepted, the same plan becomes the source of truth for delivery status and completion.
Who it is for
Personal enough to send to family. Professional enough for any client.
Independent developers
Share clear app builds, automations, migrations, and feature work without turning every quote into a debate.
Designers and consultants
Package work into phases, timelines, and acceptance checkpoints clients can understand.
Friends and family projects
Keep the relationship warm while the business side stays structured and fair.
Growing freelancers
Build a profile, collect reviews, show availability, and make repeat projects easier to close.
Next time someone asks what it would cost, send the plan.
Scope it, price it, share it, and let the client respond from a professional page.