Leave contacts
Only basic contact details in the form. The first touchpoint stays lightweight and non-technical.
No overloaded sliders, no fake urgency, no extra fields. Just a clear explanation, a few practical screens, and a short form at the end so your team can call the client back.
The user understands what happens next before filling anything out. That usually improves trust and keeps the page feeling calmer.
Only basic contact details in the form. The first touchpoint stays lightweight and non-technical.
Your manager clarifies format, region, and the next setup steps without forcing the client into a long questionnaire.
Any wallet details or technical onboarding happen later in direct communication, not inside the first form.
The page now reads like a confident product presentation: less friction, fewer distractions, and a stronger final CTA block.
No wallet field, no country selector, no long dropdowns. The first action is intentionally small.
Big headline, one supporting paragraph, and clear navigation between sections without a template-like look.
Warm neutral background, paper cards, dark typography, and restrained accents instead of the usual glossy clones.
The page collapses into a clean vertical rhythm, so the form remains comfortable on phones.
This layout works especially well when you need a more restrained first contact and do not want to ask for sensitive technical data too early.
Users who already know the offer and just need a short path to leave a request.
Flows where the main conversion is a callback or private follow-up conversation.
Brands that want the page to feel composed, expensive, and quieter than mass-market funnels.
The final block is intentionally simple: no clutter, no technical wording, and no unnecessary friction before the first conversation.