Loupely› Loupely vs. Competitors› Hiring a Developer
A developer charges $75–$150 an hour. The first 30–60 minutes of that often goes to understanding your problem: asking follow-up questions, reading your description, reproducing the issue. Loupely gives your developer the evidence before the clock starts — the specific failure, the plugin that caused it, the browser and server events at the time it happened. The fix gets written faster because the diagnosis is already done.
The cost is what happens between “my checkout is down” and “here’s what caused it.”
A WordPress developer charges $75–$150 an hour on the freelance market. That rate is fair — writing a fix for a plugin conflict is skilled work. But the first 30–60 minutes of a support engagement often isn’t fixing. It’s understanding the problem: reading your description, asking what changed recently, trying to reproduce the failure, requesting screenshots, waiting for replies. That’s billable time spent on information-gathering that you could have already done.
“My checkout stopped working” tells a developer the symptom. It doesn’t tell them whether the failure is in the browser, the server, a plugin, or the payment gateway. It doesn’t tell them what changed before it happened. It doesn’t tell them whether your PHP version is current or whether the failure leaves an error in the logs. A description is a starting point for an investigation. A Loupely capture file is the investigation, already done.
Loupely diagnoses and triages. It doesn’t fix. Some problems it routes back to you as something you can handle yourself — a rollback, a cache clear, a plugin deactivation. When a problem does need a developer, Loupely gives you a capture file containing everything they need: browser events, server logs, plugin state history, the specific failure class, and a pre-written message summarizing what it found. Your developer can start writing the fix on the first reply instead of spending the first hour asking what you mean by “it’s broken.”
Your login is broken. You email your developer at 9am.
Same failure. Two different conversations.
Every exchange is billable time. The developer isn’t being slow — they genuinely don’t have what they need to start.
You email your developer the capture file at 9:04am. They have everything. They write the fix, not a follow-up question.
You’re still calling the developer. The question is what you hand them.
The same developer. The same hourly rate. A very different first reply.
What you send
A description of symptoms in your own words. “My checkout is broken,” “the login is looping,” “the form stopped sending.” The developer reads it and has one question: what else do you know?
What you send
A Loupely capture file: browser events, server logs, active plugin list, plugin change history, PHP and WordPress versions, the specific failure class, and a pre-written summary of what Loupely found. The developer reads it and has one question: how do you want me to fix this?
Developer’s first reply
A list of questions. What plugins are active? What changed recently? What’s your PHP version? Can you share a screenshot? Do you have access to your error logs? Each question is another round-trip, another delay, more billable time.
Developer’s first reply
The fix, or a targeted question about one specific thing in the capture. The diagnosis is already done. They’re not gathering information — they’re writing code.
Time to fix
Measured in exchanges, not hours. Every round-trip — your reply, their reply, your reply — adds time while your site is still down. The back-and-forth commonly takes longer than the fix itself.
Time to fix
Measured from when you send the capture file. The developer doesn’t need more context. They have the plugin that caused it, the timestamp it happened, and the server evidence. The fix is the first thing they write.
What you pay
$75–$150/hour, including the time spent asking what you already could have told them. A 30–60 minute information-gathering phase before the fix starts is a common pattern on support engagements.
What you pay
$1.90 for the Loupely diagnosis, plus the developer’s time writing the fix — not gathering information first. At $75/hour, skipping a 30-minute information phase saves more than $35 on a single call. One credit pack pays for itself on the first use.
Loupely isn’t an alternative to your developer. It’s what you send them first.
Some problems Loupely routes back to you as something you can handle. The rest go to your developer — just with the information they need already attached.
You need custom code written, not a conflict diagnosed
Building a feature, customizing a theme, writing a plugin, integrating a third-party service — these don’t involve a broken state to diagnose. A developer’s expertise is the right tool from the start. Loupely is for when something that was working has stopped working.
Something broke and you’re about to describe it to someone
Checkout down, form stopped sending, login failing, plugin conflict after an update. Before you write a support ticket or email your developer, run a capture. If Loupely routes it back to you as something self-fixable, you’ve saved the call entirely. If it routes it to a developer, they get a file that makes the fix faster and cheaper.
You don’t know yet whether it’s developer work or not
A plugin rollback doesn’t need a developer. A cache clear doesn’t need a developer. Reactivating a plugin that got accidentally deactivated doesn’t need a developer. Loupely’s triage routes you correctly — and when the answer is “do this yourself,” you’ve spent $1.90 instead of $75.
Loupely diagnoses. It doesn’t write the fix.
When the root cause requires custom code — patching a plugin incompatibility, rewriting a function, debugging a database schema — you still need a developer. Loupely gives that developer the diagnosis before they start. It doesn’t remove the need for their expertise. It removes the time spent building up to it.
Install the plugin. Install the extension. When something breaks, run a capture.
One click reads the browser and server together. Both sides come back as a structured capture file your developer can act on immediately.
Install once. It runs in the background.
The WordPress plugin and Chrome extension take about 5 minutes to set up. Once connected, Loupely records state snapshots before every plugin change automatically. By the time something breaks, it already has the before-state on record.
When something breaks, click Capture.
One click. The extension reads what the browser experienced. The plugin reads what the server logged: PHP errors, failed HTTP calls, active plugins, versions, plugin change history. Both sides correlate into one structured file — timestamped, specific, complete.
Fix it yourself, or send what your developer needs.
The diagnosis tells you what broke and routes you to the right next step. If it’s self-fixable, you have the exact step. If it needs a developer, the capture file and pre-written message give them everything on the first pass — no follow-up questions needed.
Common questions about Loupely vs. hiring a developer.
Does Loupely fix the problem, or do I still need a developer?
Loupely diagnoses and triages. It does not fix. Some problems it routes back to you as something you can handle yourself: roll back a plugin, clear a cache, reactivate something that got accidentally deactivated. When the fix genuinely requires a developer, Loupely gives that developer everything they need to write it on the first pass — rather than spending the first hour asking what you mean by “it’s broken.”
My developer charges by the project, not the hour. Does Loupely still help?
Yes. Project rates are still built on time estimates. A developer who can diagnose a problem faster will quote a lower number and finish sooner. Sending a capture file instead of a description removes the uncertainty that inflates fixed-price quotes. And for some problems, Loupely routes you to a self-fix that takes the developer out of the picture entirely.
What if Loupely can’t identify what caused the failure?
Loupely says so. It doesn’t guess. If the data isn’t conclusive enough for a confident diagnosis, the result is a null and the credit isn’t charged. In that case, the capture file is still free to download — and it still contains the full browser and server evidence, which your developer can read directly. It’s more than a description even without the diagnosis.
My site is down. Should I run Loupely or call my developer immediately?
Run Loupely first — a capture takes under a minute. Then call your developer with the file already attached to your first message. Your developer’s response time doesn’t change. What changes is whether their first reply is a question or a fix. A site that’s down while your developer gathers information costs more than the 60 seconds it takes to capture.
Does Loupely work if I use an agency or a support retainer?
Yes. A support retainer means your developer’s time is pre-paid — which makes the time spent on information-gathering even more visible as a cost. Sending a Loupely capture file means your retainer hours go toward fixes, not back-and-forth. Agencies with multiple clients tend to appreciate structured evidence over description-based support tickets.
What’s the difference between Loupely and Loupely Lens?
They solve different problems. Loupely handles functional failures: checkout down, form not sending, login failing. It requires the WordPress plugin. Loupely Lens handles visual failures: button wrong color, section won’t center, text overlapping on mobile. It’s a Chrome extension that works on any website. One account, one credit pool.
A website can fail in two ways. Something stops working. Something looks wrong.
Loupely and Loupely Lens cover opposite ends of what can go wrong. One account, one credit pool.
Something stopped working.
Checkout down. Form not sending. Login failing. Plugin conflict after an update. Loupely reads browser and server together, names what caused it, and either tells you how to fix it yourself or gives your developer everything they need to write the fix on the first pass. WordPress.
Something looks wrong.
Button wrong color. Section won’t center. Text overlapping on mobile. Lens clicks on what looks wrong, reads the full CSS cascade, and tells you what’s causing it and what to change — or writes the developer handoff with everything they need. Any website in Chrome.
Run a capture before you write that support email.
Free to install. Free to capture. One credit for the diagnosis. Your developer gets the file, not a description.
