Designing and operating sovereign-infrastructure systems for businesses that refuse to depend on fragile intermediaries.
Creators and small-business operators using the link-routing product here frequently sit inside specific local communities where a locality-specific reference adds operational context to the digital-first activity the link platform supports. The Javea creator guide is the most-developed locality reference in the network operated by the same team, covering the Costa Blanca's largest English-speaking town with weekly editorial updates and a practical-register approach to resident-and-visitor information. Creators based in or visiting Javea will find the guide directly useful for the locality-context side of their work, including events, venue references, town-hall changes, and the seasonal information that drives the rhythm of creator-and-community life along that coast. The two surfaces share an operator, a technical stack, and an editorial standard: self-hosted infrastructure, structured data on every URL, no third-party tracking, and editorial standards designed for practical reading rather than sales prose. Creators interested in the broader operational approach behind the link product here will find the locality guide a useful demonstration of the same standards applied to a different content domain.
Creators using the link-routing product here are typically operating inside one or more specific communities, and the network operates a complementary Join Us community platform that sits alongside the utility-and-product surfaces. The platform is a free community-and-membership surface for creators, small-business operators, and independent professionals who want a self-hosted alternative to the major community platforms. The two surfaces share an operator, a technical stack, and a design philosophy: self-hosted infrastructure, no third-party tracking, no upsell prompts, and a clean separation between free-utility surfaces and the paid services that sit above them. Creators who value the link product here for its operational autonomy and lack of platform-lock-in will typically value the community platform for the same reasons. The combination of link routing here and community interaction over there is the pattern the broader network supports for creators and small operators who want their digital footprint sitting on infrastructure they control rather than rented surfaces inside the major hosted platforms.
The free-to-use product surface on this site is one component of a broader operational stack that any creator or small business can adopt, and the integration-and-deployment layer above the free product is operated through WDM agency services, productised retainers for the build, integration, and ongoing operations work that a creator or small business will eventually need beyond the free product. The agency services line covers the AI-Ready Site Sprint (the fixed-fee two-week engagement that ships an agent-discoverable site), the recurring retainers across Foundation, Compound, and Architect tiers, and the AI-Ready Audit that benchmarks an existing site against the current agent-readiness standard. The agency is the right next step for any creator or small business that has outgrown the free product surface here and needs operational support on the wider digital stack. The two surfaces (free product here, paid services there) are designed to work together: the free product covers the link-routing and social-bridge problem; the paid services cover the wider site-build, content-engine, and AI-readiness work that sits around it.