Tech Foundation
Designed and built a procurement-ready web presence for a veteran-led AI governance firm — engineered to win the trust of federal buyers.

Objective
Summit AI Governance is a Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business helping federal agencies and prime contractors meet AI compliance requirements like OMB M-24-10 and NIST AI RMF. Their buyers are not casual visitors — they're procurement officers, legal teams, and risk owners who decide in seconds whether a vendor looks credible enough to engage.
I was brought in to shape and build a web presence that does one thing exceptionally well: make a small specialized firm look as trustworthy and procurement-ready as a much larger one. The objective was credibility under scrutiny — every page had to survive the skeptical eye of a government reviewer and still move them toward a conversation.


Solution
I led the strategy and built the site in Webflow with custom JavaScript where it mattered. In a field this regulated, trust isn't decoration — it's structure. So I designed each page around the questions a federal buyer asks before they engage: Is this real? Is it certified? Has it been done before?
The answer surfaces immediately — certifications, capability statement, and proof of delivered work placed exactly where a procurement reviewer looks first. Dense compliance language was reshaped into clear, scannable sections that respect a busy reviewer's time without dumbing down the expertise. Custom JS handled the interactive logic cleanly and invisibly, the way good engineering should feel.
The result is a site that punches far above the size of the firm behind it. It takes a complex, high-stakes service and makes the next step obvious — turning a specialized practice into one that looks ready for government engagement at first glance. For a business that lives or dies on credibility, that's not a design detail. That's the deal.
