About
A small studio with big standards.

Jaelin Randall
Owner
The Founder
Built by a designer, run like a studio.
SpidR Web Studios was founded in Atlanta with a simple belief: small businesses deserve the same caliber of design and engineering that Fortune 500 companies enjoy.
After a decade of designing for agencies and tech companies, our founder set out to build a studio focused on what actually matters — websites that look exceptional, perform fast, and keep paying off long after launch.
Today, SpidR is a tight-knit team that partners with bold brands across the Southeast, weaving custom websites and providing the ongoing care needed to keep them thriving.
Why SpidR
Built around the things that actually move the needle.
Craft over churn
We deliberately take on fewer projects each quarter so the ones we do ship are genuinely great. No assembly line, no junior handoffs, no cutting corners to hit a quota — every site gets the time it actually needs to be excellent. Quality isn't a marketing line for us, it's the entire business model.
Clarity, always
Transparent fixed-scope quotes before any work begins, plain-English updates throughout the build, and detailed walkthroughs at every milestone. You'll always know what we're working on, what it costs, and what's coming next — no hidden fees, no surprise invoices, and no jargon designed to confuse.
Long-term partners
Most of our clients stay with us for years because launch day is the starting line, not the finish. We continue to refine, optimize, and evolve your site as your business grows — adding pages, testing new ideas, and keeping everything fast, secure, and on-brand long after the initial build.
How we work
A studio model, not an agency machine.
Big agencies sell hours. We sell outcomes. Every engagement is scoped end-to-end, quoted up front, and led by the same person from the first call to launch day — and every change after.
That means faster decisions, tighter feedback loops, and a website that actually reflects your business. When you text us a tweak, the person reading it is the person shipping it.