By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Web Design Intake Forms: What to Capture Before the First Wireframe

A web design project that starts with "just build us something modern" is a project heading for scope creep, revision spirals, and a client who is unhappy with the result despite never articulating what they wanted. The problem is not that the designer lacks talent. The problem is that no one pinned down the requirements before the work started. And by the time the client sees a homepage mockup they do not like, everyone has already invested weeks of effort that cannot be recovered.

The difference between a project that launches on time and one that drags through months of revisions almost always traces back to intake. A thorough web design intake form captures what the client actually needs, what their business is trying to accomplish, what technical constraints exist, and who has the authority to approve the final product. Here is what that form should include.

Project type: defining what you are actually building

Web design is not a single service. A new brochure site for a law firm and an e-commerce migration from Shopify to WooCommerce are entirely different engagements with different timelines, budgets, technical requirements, and risk profiles. Your intake should identify the project type immediately because it shapes every question that follows:

Business goals: what the website is supposed to accomplish

A website without a defined business goal is a digital brochure that exists because the client felt they should have one. That is not enough to design against. Your intake form needs to surface what the client expects the website to do for their business, because every design decision, page structure, and call-to-action should serve that goal:

Most clients will identify with more than one goal. That is fine. What matters is the priority ranking. A site that tries to optimize equally for lead generation, e-commerce, and brand storytelling will do none of them well.

Current web presence: understanding what already exists

If the client has an existing website, you need to understand its current state before you can plan the transition. Skipping this step leads to broken redirects, lost SEO rankings, and integrations that stop working on launch day:

Design preferences: visual direction without guesswork

Asking a client "what do you want it to look like?" produces answers that are impossible to act on. "Clean and modern" means something different to every person who says it. Your intake form should structure this conversation so the design team gets actionable direction:

This kind of structured creative intake is what separates professional discovery from ad hoc guesswork. Photography and videography studios face a similar challenge — translating a client's visual taste into actionable creative direction.

Content: who provides what, and when

Content is the single most common bottleneck in web design projects. The design is done, the development is done, and the site sits unfinished because no one has written the About page. Your intake form must address content ownership and timeline explicitly:

Technical requirements: platform, integrations, and compliance

This is where intake separates web designers from web developers, and where many creative-focused agencies leave money on the table by not asking the right questions early enough:

Technical discovery at intake is similar to what IT support companies capture when onboarding a new client — you need the full picture of the existing infrastructure before you can responsibly plan what to build on top of it.

SEO requirements: protecting and building search visibility

A beautiful website that no one can find is a failure. SEO should be part of the intake conversation, not an afterthought bolted on after the site is built:

Timeline, budget, and maintenance

Timeline and budget are where client expectations most often diverge from reality. A client who wants a custom e-commerce site with 500 products, three integrations, and a blog — launched in four weeks for $3,000 — needs to hear about that gap at intake, not after the contract is signed:

Domain and hosting logistics

These are the operational details that seem mundane until they block a launch. A site that is ready to go live but cannot because no one has DNS credentials has happened to every agency at least once:

Stakeholders and the approval process

This is the section of the intake form that prevents the single most frustrating pattern in client work: building to one person's vision, only to discover at the review stage that three other people have veto power and different opinions.

Setting the engagement up for success

A web design project that begins with a comprehensive intake process is a project where the client feels heard, the scope is defined, the technical requirements are documented, and the approval chain is clear. That is the foundation for a smooth engagement — not a guarantee of one, but the closest thing to it.

The alternative is the project that starts with a handshake and a vague brief, where the designer discovers halfway through development that the client needs Salesforce integration, the CEO hates blue, and no one has written a single line of copy. That project is going to cost more, take longer, and leave everyone dissatisfied.

If you are building intake documentation across a professional services operation, the Professional Services Bundle includes web design alongside 34 other professional service categories, each with industry-specific intake fields.

Web design intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Project type, business goals, design preferences, technical requirements, CMS and integrations, SEO, content strategy, timeline, budget, and stakeholder approval process. Built for web designers, developers, and digital agencies.

View Web Design Forms