Picture a Bentley pulling up to the Ritz-Carlton. The camera zooms in on a doorman in white gloves, opening the car door. A lavishly dressed woman steps out, her dress flowing. Everyone around her is doing her bidding. She’s utterly cared for.
That image is how we think about building websites for small business owners.
Not the Bentley. Not the dress. The feeling. The experience of being so thoroughly taken care of that you almost forget there was ever a process at all. That’s what white glove web design means at Yeet Websites — and it’s why we built our entire business around it.
White Glove Doesn’t Mean White Price Tag
Most people hear “white glove” and think expensive. Boutique. Luxury pricing for a premium audience. That’s not what we’re doing.
Our websites are $4,000 to own outright or $130 a month on a subscription. That’s the same price whether you’re a plumber in Ohio or a dentist in Texas. We didn’t build white glove service for people with unlimited budgets. We built it for small business owners who’ve been burned by companies that took their money and disappeared.
White glove at Yeet means luxury service at a fair price. It means we do the heavy lifting so you don’t have to. It means the process feels effortless on your end even though there’s an enormous amount of work happening on ours.
We don’t always succeed at making it feel magical. But that’s the aim with every build, every interaction, every Tuesday afternoon email about a photo that needs converting.
The Acupuncturist Who Gave Us Almost Nothing to Work With
One of our favorite projects started with almost zero raw material. A client came to us wanting a website for her acupuncture practice. She had no content. No written copy. No brochure. No “about me” paragraph. She had one directive: she liked the color red.
She liked red a bit too much, if we’re being honest. So we had to gently steer that conversation. But more importantly, she was short with her answers to our questions. Not rude — just genuinely busy running her practice. She didn’t have hours to sit in a Zoom call walking us through her services or her philosophy of care.
So we did what white glove service demands: we figured it out ourselves.
We researched acupuncture. We studied her local competitors. We dug into the language her potential patients would use when searching for help. We wrote the content. We built the structure. We designed the pages. The end product was 99% our research and our creativity.
She was beyond happy. And she’s still a client to this day.
That’s the white glove standard. Not “send us your content and we’ll plug it in.” Not “fill out this 47-page questionnaire.” Instead: give us what you’ve got, even if that’s almost nothing, and we’ll handle the rest.
The Name Is New. The Service Isn’t.
Here’s the thing about our Yeetish approach to white glove service — the page on our website is relatively new. It went up around the middle of 2025. But the service? That’s been happening since day one.
We’d been converting odd photo files for clients. Cropping images with the Snipping Tool because they didn’t know how. Writing entire batches of content when a client didn’t have anything to give us. Handling DNS transfers that most companies would charge extra for. Fixing formatting issues that had nothing to do with the website but everything to do with the client’s ability to provide us what we needed. That’s the kind of thing that falls under full-service web design scope — and we were doing all of it long before we had a name for it.
Around the second quarter of 2025, we took a step back and realized just how much we were doing that was complimentary — and how much of it other companies would never touch. So we put a name to it. White Glove. Because it better signifies what we’d already been doing for years and what we expect from ourselves going forward.
Naming something doesn’t create it. But it does sharpen the commitment. Once you call it white glove, you hold yourself to that standard on the days when it’s easy and the days when it’s not.
What White Glove Looks Like on a Random Tuesday
If there was a rule book for white glove service, it wouldn’t be white glove.
That sounds like a riddle, but it’s the truth. White glove isn’t a checklist. It’s not “respond within 2 hours” or “include 3 rounds of revisions.” Those are policies. White glove is a mindset.
It shows up in the curve balls. The odd requests. The difficulty clients have with certain tasks that they feel embarrassed about because they think they should know how to do it themselves. A client who can’t figure out how to export a photo from their phone. A business owner who needs their logo in a different format but doesn’t know what format means. Someone who needs a paragraph rewritten but can’t articulate why the current one doesn’t feel right.
White glove means we don’t sigh. We don’t send them a tutorial link. We just handle it. And if you call and we can’t pick up, we’re calling you back — usually within minutes, not days.
That’s not to say we do everything for free. That’s not reasonable, and even our most engaged clients don’t expect it. But what we do expect from ourselves is the willingness and the drive to make the client’s life easier. And here’s the part that surprises people: when we operate that way, our lives get easier too. When a client isn’t stressed about the small stuff, they give us room to be creative. The whole process flows better.
What Clients Say — And What They Don’t
Some clients go absolutely bonkers about what we do and how fast we do it. The speed catches people off guard more than anything else. They’re used to waiting weeks for a response. They’re used to being a ticket number. When something gets handled in hours instead of days, it recalibrates their expectations for every other service provider they work with.
Some clients just smile. Some say a simple thank you. And honestly, those quiet reactions tell us just as much as the enthusiastic ones. A client who stops worrying about their website is a client who trusts us. That silence isn’t indifference — it’s peace of mind. It means the white glove approach is working exactly as intended. They’ve stopped thinking about their website because they know we’re thinking about it for them.
Every client reacts differently. That difference is part of what makes this work so rewarding.
The Growth Question
The big question is always the same: how do you maintain white glove service as you grow? And it’s a fair question. Every business faces it. The thing that made you special when you had 10 clients can feel impossible when you have 100.
But we think about it differently. The question isn’t how can we do it. The question is how can we not do it.
Customer service, by and large, has fallen by the wayside over the last two decades. Automated phone trees. Chatbots that don’t chat. Support tickets that go into a void. The bar is so low that simply being a real human who responds quickly feels revolutionary.
At Yeet Websites, we want to prove that customer service is thriving. That treating people the way you’d want to be treated isn’t a quaint idea from a bygone era — it’s a competitive advantage that compounds over time. Every client who has a great experience tells someone. Every client who gets white glove treatment becomes a walking case study in what’s possible. And the service doesn’t stop at launch — we wrote about what the post-launch experience looks like because it’s a question every prospect should be asking.
We’re going to keep doing this until it’s impossible. And by our estimation, that will be never.
What This Means for Your Project
If you’re a small business owner reading this and thinking, “That sounds great, but my project is different” — let us stop you right there. We’ve built over 300 websites. We’ve worked with clients who had full brand books and detailed content outlines. We’ve worked with clients who had nothing but a phone number and a color preference.
The process adapts to you. That’s the whole point. You don’t have to learn our system. You don’t have to become a project manager. You don’t have to spend your weekends writing website copy when you should be running your business. That’s what hands-off website design means in practice.
You bring whatever you’ve got — even if that’s just an idea — and we bring the white gloves. Curious what the process looks like from the moment you sign up? We walk through every step from day one.
If you’re curious what the full experience looks like, we walk through our pricing and approach in subscription vs. ownership. And if you’ve been burned before and want to know what keeps clients around without contracts — read why you can leave anytime.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does white glove web design mean?
White glove web design means the process is effortless on your end. You provide whatever you can — content, photos, ideas, or even just a color preference — and the web design team handles the rest. Research, writing, design, technical setup, revisions, and launch are all managed for you so you can focus on running your business.
Does white glove service cost more?
Not at Yeet Websites. Our pricing is the same for every client: $4,000 to own your site outright or $130 per month on a subscription with a $600 setup fee. The white glove experience is built into how we operate, not charged as a premium add-on.
What if I don’t have any content or copy for my website?
That’s perfectly fine. We’ve built entire websites from scratch when the client had nothing but a business name and a vague color preference. We research your industry, write the content, and build the pages. You review and approve. Most clients are surprised by how little they need to provide for the end result to feel completely like their business.
How is white glove different from what other web design companies offer?
Most companies hand you a questionnaire, wait for you to fill it out, and then build from your answers. If you don’t provide enough, the project stalls. White glove flips that. We take whatever you can give us and fill in the gaps ourselves through research, writing, and design expertise. The project never stalls waiting on you.
Can you maintain white glove service as you take on more clients?
This is the question we ask ourselves constantly. Our answer is that white glove isn’t a feature we can turn off. It’s how we operate. Customer service across most industries has dropped so low that being genuinely responsive and proactive is a competitive advantage, not a burden. We’re committed to maintaining this standard because it’s the reason we have a 98% client retention rate.
What happens if I need something unusual or outside the normal scope?
We handle it. Converting unusual file formats, cropping photos, rewriting content, troubleshooting email issues that have nothing to do with the website — if it’s something we can reasonably help with, we do. Not everything is free, but the willingness to figure it out and make your life easier is always there.
How do I get started with Yeet Websites?
Reach out through our contact page or call us directly. We’ll have a straightforward conversation about what you need, give you honest answers about whether we’re the right fit, and if we are, you could have a finished website in as little as 16 days. No contracts, no pressure, no web design jargon.