From the desk of: Dustin Scaffide
There's a moment every investor hits where you look at your credit card statement and realize you're bleeding out through subscriptions.
Carrot. ClickFunnels. Mailchimp. Maybe a CRM on top of that. Each one doing its little piece. Each one charging you monthly for the privilege.
I added mine up one afternoon. Not because I wanted to — because I had to. Something felt wrong. The deals were coming in, but the margins were thinner than they should've been. So I pulled the statements and started tallying.
$297 here. $149 there. Another $99. A $49 I forgot I was even paying for.
When the number hit north of $600 a month — just on lead gen software — I sat back and asked myself a question I probably should've asked a year earlier:
Why am I renting all of this?
I'm a guy who builds things. That's what I do. I look at systems, I figure out how they work, and I build better ones. So why was I paying someone else every month to run landing pages I could build myself? Why was I trusting a third-party database with my leads — leads I generated, from campaigns I paid for, on domains I owned?
That was the snap.
Not a dramatic one. Just a quiet decision at my desk on a Tuesday afternoon. I'm done renting. I'm building my own.
It took me a while. I'm not going to pretend I knocked it out over a weekend. I studied what worked — the pages that actually converted, the forms that captured the right information, the follow-up sequences that turned cold leads into phone calls, refined over two decades. I stripped out everything that was there just to look pretty and kept everything that made the phone ring.
What I ended up with was a system. Ten funnels, ready to deploy. Three conversion funnels built for the leads that matter most — motivated sellers, rent-to-own buyers, and capital partners. Seven survey funnels for everything else — screening apprentices, vetting lenders, collecting reviews, routing service requests.
All of it sits on my domain. My hosting. My data. No monthly fees. No third-party dashboards I need permission to access. No "your plan doesn't include that feature" walls.
I called it InvestorFunnel.
Here's what I didn't expect: how fast it deploys. The whole system can be up and running in under 30 minutes. Every page is HTML, CSS, and JavaScript — no bloated page builders, no drag-and-drop editors that generate 400 lines of code to render a button. Just clean, fast pages that load instantly and do one job: capture the lead.
And because it's all white-label, you can deploy it under your brand, your domain, your colors. Nobody knows it's a system. It just looks like you built the best landing pages in your market — because functionally, you did.
I'll be honest — the thing I'm most proud of isn't the funnels themselves. It's the math.
I added up what you'd pay to cobble together the equivalent stack from various SaaS tools. Landing page builder. CRM. Form tool. Email integration. Multi-campaign management. Domain hosting. Custom design work.
The number came out to $7,826.
InvestorFunnel is a one-time investment of $497. You own it forever. Lifetime updates included.
I'm not saying that to pitch you. I'm saying it because that math is what convinced me to stop renting and start owning. And once I did, the margins got right again.
Look — if the subscriptions don't bother you, keep paying them. Some people prefer the hands-off approach, and that's fine.
But if you're the type who'd rather own the machine than rent time on someone else's — if you want your leads in your database, on your domain, with zero monthly overhead — then this might be worth a look.
One-time. Lifetime. Yours.
Book your 15min strategy session.