import { BlogFAQ } from "../BlogFAQ";
import { BlogInlineCTA } from "../BlogInlineCTA";
import { BlogStatStrip } from "../BlogStatStrip";
import { BlogTierCards } from "../BlogTierCards";
import type { TOCItem } from "../BlogTOC";

export const unlimitedGuideFAQ = [
  {
    q: "What is an unlimited design subscription?",
    a: "A flat monthly fee service where you submit unlimited design requests through a queue, and a dedicated team delivers them one by one, usually within 24 to 72 hours each. No hourly billing or per-project quotes.",
  },
  {
    q: "How much does an unlimited design subscription cost?",
    a: "In 2026, budget services run $250–$700/mo for simple graphics, mid-tier services $1,400–$3,000, and premium services with senior product designers and development run $3,000–$5,000. Enterprise options start around $9,000.",
  },
  {
    q: "Does unlimited really mean unlimited?",
    a: "Your request queue is unlimited. Output is sequential, typically one active request at a time per subscription. Compare services on per-request turnaround rather than the word unlimited.",
  },
  {
    q: "Is a design subscription better than hiring a designer?",
    a: "Below roughly Series B, usually yes. A senior in-house designer costs four to five times more per year, takes months to hire, and covers one skill set. A premium subscription starts within a day and includes design, development, and project management.",
  },
  {
    q: "Can I cancel or pause whenever I want?",
    a: "Reputable services bill in monthly cycles with no contract, let you pause with unused days rolling over, and let you cancel before renewal without penalty. Treat anything stricter as a red flag.",
  },
] as const;

export const unlimitedGuideTOC: TOCItem[] = [
  { id: "how-it-works", label: "How it actually works" },
  { id: "cost", label: "What it costs in 2026" },
  { id: "scope", label: "What you can request" },
  { id: "fine-print", label: "The fine print" },
  { id: "fit", label: "Who it fits" },
  { id: "how-we-run", label: "How we run it" },
  { id: "faq", label: "FAQ" },
];

export function ArticleUnlimitedGuide() {
  return (
    <div className="b-prose">
      <p className="b-lead">
        Somewhere around 2021, a new way of buying design showed up: pay one
        flat monthly fee, request as much design work as you want, and get it
        back in a couple of days. No hourly billing, no project quotes, no
        hiring.
      </p>
      <p>
        Five years later, the model has matured. There are now dozens of
        services selling &ldquo;unlimited design&rdquo; at prices anywhere from
        $250 to $9,000 a month, and the word <em>unlimited</em> means something
        different at almost every one of them.
      </p>
      <p>
        We run one of these services, so we know the model inside and out,
        including the parts most sales pages skip. This guide explains how
        subscriptions actually work, what they cost in 2026, and how to avoid
        picking the wrong one.
      </p>

      <h2 id="how-it-works">
        How an unlimited design subscription actually works
      </h2>
      <p>
        The mechanics are simple. You subscribe, you get access to a request
        board (usually Notion, Trello, or Slack), and you add design tasks to a
        queue. The team works through your queue, typically one request at a
        time, and delivers each one in 24 to 72 hours. You review, ask for
        revisions, approve, and the next request starts.
      </p>
      <p>
        That queue is the detail that matters.{" "}
        <strong>
          &ldquo;Unlimited&rdquo; means you can add as many requests as you
          want. It does not mean ten designers working on ten things at once.
        </strong>{" "}
        Your backlog is unlimited. The throughput is not.
      </p>
      <p>
        This sounds like a catch, but it&rsquo;s actually why the model works.
        The service can charge a flat fee because its capacity per client is
        predictable. You get senior people at a fraction of agency rates because
        nobody is padding hours.
      </p>
      <blockquote>
        A realistic month: queue eight requests. A landing page, three product
        screens, a deck refresh, two ad sets, a{" "}
        <a
          href="https://designshare.net/#pricing"
          target="_blank"
          rel="noopener noreferrer"
        >
          pricing
        </a>{" "}
        page. The team delivers roughly one every two days. By month&rsquo;s
        end, all eight are done.
      </blockquote>
      <p>
        The same scope at an agency would have been quoted as two or three
        separate projects, with two or three separate invoices.
      </p>

      <h2 id="cost">What it costs in 2026</h2>
      <p>The market has settled into three rough tiers.</p>

      <BlogTierCards
        tiers={[
          {
            price: "$250–$700/mo",
            desc: "<strong>Budget tier.</strong> Graphic design only, social posts, banners, simple collateral. Mid-level designers; product/UI work out of scope.",
          },
          {
            price: "$1,400–$3,000/mo",
            desc: "<strong>Mid-tier.</strong> Stronger designers, some motion and video, faster turnaround. Still mostly marketing design rather than product design.",
          },
          {
            price: "$3,000–$5,000/mo",
            desc: "<strong>Premium tier.</strong> Senior designers doing product UI, UX, design systems, and brand. Some services (ours included) also build in Webflow or Framer and include a PM. The tier startups use to replace their first design hire.",
            highlight: true,
          },
        ]}
      />

      <p>
        Above that sits the enterprise bracket, $9,000 a month and up, which is
        really a different product: dedicated creative teams for companies with
        constant high volume.
      </p>

      <BlogStatStrip
        stats={[
          {
            num: "$170",
            numSuffix: "k+",
            label: "Senior in-house designer, fully loaded per year",
          },
          {
            num: "$42",
            numSuffix: "k",
            label: "A premium subscription per year ($3,495/mo)",
          },
          {
            num: "1–2",
            numSuffix: "d",
            label: "To start, vs 2–4 months to hire",
          },
        ]}
      />
      <p>That gap is the entire reason this market exists.</p>

      <h2 id="scope">What you can request, and what you can&rsquo;t</h2>
      <p>
        A good premium subscription covers most things a startup needs: landing
        pages, app and dashboard UI, onboarding flows, design systems, brand
        identity, pitch decks, email templates, and ad creatives. If the service
        includes development, Webflow and Framer builds too.
      </p>
      <p>
        What it doesn&rsquo;t cover is full product engineering: backend,
        databases, native apps, AI integrations. If a subscription service tells
        you they&rsquo;ll build your entire product inside the monthly fee, be
        skeptical. That work needs a fixed scope and a real engineering process.{" "}
        <a
          href="https://eleganttechbd.com/"
          target="_blank"
          rel="noopener noreferrer"
        >
          Our parent studio
        </a>{" "}
        handles those as separate fixed-price projects, which is the honest way
        to do it.
      </p>
      <p>
        The other thing a subscription won&rsquo;t do is strategy. You bring the
        direction and the priorities; the service executes fast. If you
        don&rsquo;t know what you want to build or test, the queue just sits
        there.
      </p>

      <h2 id="fine-print">The fine print is worth reading</h2>
      <p>
        Four things separate good services from disappointing ones, and none of
        them are on the pricing page.
      </p>
      <ul>
        <li>
          <strong>Who actually does the work?</strong> Ask directly: who will
          work on my account, and how long have they been with you? A single
          freelancer pool usually shows up in your third or fourth request, when
          the style suddenly changes.
        </li>
        <li>
          <strong>Real turnaround, not advertised turnaround.</strong> Everyone
          says 48 hours. Ask what happens with a complex request, like a full
          app redesign. The honest answer: big projects get split into
          milestones delivered every day or two.
        </li>
        <li>
          <strong>Revision policy in practice.</strong> Unlimited revisions are
          standard language. What matters is what happens when a design is
          fundamentally not working after three rounds—good services reassign or
          rework the brief; bad ones keep polishing something broken.
        </li>
        <li>
          <strong>Pause terms.</strong> The best version: pause anytime, unused
          days roll over, billing in 31-day cycles. A service confident in its
          quality doesn&rsquo;t need to trap you to keep you.
        </li>
      </ul>

      <BlogInlineCTA
        heading="The premium version of"
        accent="this model."
        text="DesignShare gives you a senior designer, senior web developer, and project manager for $3,495/mo flat. ~48-hour delivery, pause anytime."
        cta="See how it works"
        href="https://designshare.net/#how"
      />

      <h2 id="fit">Who the model fits, honestly</h2>
      <p>
        A subscription makes sense when you ship at least three design projects
        a month, when you care about speed, and when you&rsquo;d rather have a
        predictable cost than negotiate quotes. That describes most startups
        between pre-seed and Series B, plus agencies that resell design
        capacity.
      </p>
      <p>
        It&rsquo;s the wrong choice if you need one logo and nothing else for
        six months—hire a freelancer for that. It&rsquo;s also wrong if you need
        ten parallel workstreams with strategy included. That&rsquo;s agency
        territory, and you&rsquo;ll pay agency prices for it because the
        coordination is genuinely expensive.
      </p>
      <p>
        The honest test: count your design needs from the last 90 days. If you
        shipped, or wanted to ship, more than two pieces of design work a month,
        and any of it sat waiting on a freelancer&rsquo;s availability, the math
        almost certainly favors a subscription.
      </p>

      <h2 id="how-we-run">How we run it at DesignShare</h2>
      <p>
        Since we&rsquo;re writing this, here&rsquo;s our version of the answers
        above. One flat fee of $3,495 a month. A senior designer, a senior web
        developer, and a project manager on every account, all from{" "}
        <a
          href="https://eleganttechbd.com/"
          target="_blank"
          rel="noopener noreferrer"
        >
          Elegant IT Limited
        </a>
        , the studio behind DesignShare since 2017. One active request at a time
        with an unlimited queue. Around 48 hours per request on average.
        Delivery in Figma, Webflow, or Framer. Pause anytime with rollover days,
        and a 7-day guarantee where we refund 75% of your first month if the
        quality, speed, or communication isn&rsquo;t what you expected.
      </p>
      <p>
        We built it this way because we&rsquo;d seen the failure modes: the solo
        operator who disappears on vacation, the freelancer pool with no memory
        of your brand, the agency invoice that doubles mid-project. A stable
        senior team on a flat fee fixes all three.
      </p>

      <h2 id="faq">Frequently asked questions</h2>
      <BlogFAQ items={unlimitedGuideFAQ} />

      <BlogInlineCTA
        heading="Try the premium version for"
        accent="yourself."
        text="Senior design and senior web developer, one flat fee of $3,495/mo, ~48-hour delivery. Pause or cancel anytime."
        cta="Join the club"
        href="https://designshare.net/#pricing"
      />
    </div>
  );
}
