# Ramona Tejeda, Owner at Tejeda Digital: read of Clienta, June 20 2026

> 9 years in ops and agency work, currently managing 6 home-services clients who all run their leads through WhatsApp and Google Sheets and nothing else.

## How I got here
A landscaping client texted me last Tuesday. Three leads had replied to her WhatsApp and she'd forgotten to scroll back. I told her I'd find something. Googled "WhatsApp CRM small business leads" and ended up here after skipping the sponsored results. This was on page two, not page one.

## What I clicked first
The headline: "Every lead that lands on WhatsApp is a conversion waiting to happen." That's almost word-for-word the pitch I've been making to clients for six months, so I stayed. Then I scrolled looking for screenshots. There weren't any.

## Where I paused
The Fermi math. "$-19,688 Year-1 take-home" sits on the page like it's a normal thing to publish. I've looked at a lot of product pages. Nobody does that. Then right below it: "1 in 6 Meaningful-success odds." I re-read the whole page after that because I needed to understand what I was actually looking at.

Turns out this isn't a product I can buy and hand to a client. This is Wishdeal Studio selling me a strategy package and code starter so I can go build and operate this product myself. The $5 is for a dossier. The $99-$199 is for "working code starter, brand assets, copy library." The "← All ideas" link in the nav is the tell. This is one of a catalog of unbuilt ideas. That realization took me longer than it should have.

## What I distrusted
"Smart Intake Templates. Pre-built question flows that qualify leads in real time. Customize for your service." What are the templates? I can't see one. "Lead Scoring. Red flags and hot signals bubble up automatically." Based on what? Who defines a red flag? The copy describes the outcome without touching the mechanism.

The line that stopped me cold: "Honest disclosure: we don't have live customers on this idea yet. We shipped the strategy package; you ship the customer conversations." That's refreshingly direct. It's also a significant thing to bury in the middle of a sales page. If I'm paying $99 for a code starter for a product that has zero production users, I need to know that upfront, not in fine print.

## What would convince me
One real WhatsApp conversation screenshot showing the intake flow working. Not a "Before / With Clienta" graphic with arrows. An actual chat thread, even anonymized. Twelve messages of a lead getting qualified in real time would tell me more than all five feature bullets combined.

If the Fermi math is real, show the assumptions. What market size? What churn rate? What monthly price did you assume? I can poke holes in assumptions. I can't evaluate a black box that outputs -$19,688 and says "trust us, it's Fermi."

## What I'd ask in an email reply
1. The $99-$199 tier includes "working code starter." What stack? If it's a no-code Zapier setup I can maintain without a developer, that's a real option for my clients. If it's a Node app on a VPS, that's a different conversation about what "working" means.
2. "One-Click Booking. Send appointment links without leaving the chat." Which booking tools does this actually integrate with? My clients are on Calendly, Google Calendar, and one stubborn holdout on Acuity. If the answer is "WhatsApp + Google Calendar only," that eliminates two of my six clients immediately.
3. You scored "pain intensity: 4/10" as a concern. If the pain is that mild, who is the buyer who opens their wallet without a long sales cycle? What's the moment that tips them?

## Verdict: on-the-fence
The negative year-one Fermi and the 1-in-6 odds disclosure are the most honest things I've seen on a product page in a while, and that alone keeps me from closing the tab. But the feature descriptions are thin, there's no way to evaluate the code quality, and I'd need to understand exactly what I'm buying before I'd spend $99 on something to resell to a client.

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*Memo by skeptic persona, generated 2026-06-20. Studio breaks own self-grading loop.*
