1stPride is a web design studio in Oklahoma City that builds custom websites for small businesses and nonprofits, with a focus on sites that convert visitors into customers or donors rather than showcase portfolios alone.
1stPride handles the full web design cycle: strategy, design, development, and deployment. The studio works primarily with organizations between 5 and 100 employees, including local nonprofits, service providers, and e-commerce retailers. Unlike freelancers or template-based platforms, 1stPride produces original designs tied to client goals and integrates backend functionality like membership portals, donation systems, or inventory management. Projects typically range from six to twelve weeks from kickoff to launch.
1stPride offers three engagement tiers. The Starter package ($3,500–$5,500) covers a five- to seven-page brochure site with basic SEO setup, suitable for service businesses or nonprofits establishing an online presence. The Standard package ($7,000–$12,000) adds e-commerce capability, form automation, and integration with third-party tools like Mailchimp or Zapier. The Custom package ($15,000 and above) is built case-by-case for complex projects: multivendor marketplaces, membership platforms, or sites requiring custom applications. All packages include three months of post-launch support and revisions.
1stPride does not charge retainers for ongoing maintenance; instead, clients pay per-request for updates after launch, typically $100–$300 per hour. Hosting, domain registration, and SSL certificates are billed separately at cost.
The Oklahoma City web design market includes both standalone developers and larger agencies. Freelancers and boutique shops like those listed on Oklahoma City's tech job boards often cost less upfront ($2,000–$5,000) but may lack project management structure or post-launch support. Larger agencies like those serving enterprise clients in Dallas or Kansas City typically start at $20,000 and prioritize brand strategy over conversion; they suit companies with six-figure budgets. 1stPride occupies the middle ground: more structured than a freelancer, less expensive than a regional agency, and focused on measurable outcomes rather than design awards. Choose 1stPride if you want a single point of contact and a defined timeline. Choose a freelancer if budget is tight and you can manage the project yourself. Choose a larger agency only if your site serves as a flagship brand asset and cost is secondary.
1stPride works best for local nonprofits, clinics, salons, contractors, and retailers who need a professional site but lack in-house marketing staff. The studio excels at taking vague briefs and turning them into functional designs. Clients who change their minds frequently, demand unlimited revisions, or expect to pay freelancer prices for agency-scale work will be frustrated. 1stPride also does not specialize in high-traffic platforms (SaaS applications, social networks) or graphic design outside web context; those require different expertise.
Initial consultation is free and conducted by phone or video. You'll discuss business goals, target audience, competitor sites you like, and budget. 1stPride then provides a written proposal with scope, timeline, and deliverables. If accepted, the project kicks off with a strategy workshop where the studio maps user journeys and defines success metrics (form submissions, donations, product sales). Design drafts come in weeks two and three; development and integration follow. You'll have three approval rounds built into Standard and Custom packages.
1stPride operates Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Central Time. The studio is located in midtown Oklahoma City and accommodates in-person kickoff meetings; ongoing work happens via email, Slack, and video calls. Parking is available on-site. Most clients never need to visit after the initial meeting.
1stPride fills a specific need in Oklahoma City's web design landscape: accountability and clarity at a price that doesn't require venture capital. For a local business or nonprofit ready to invest in a site that works, this is the logical next step after outgrowing template builders.
