1) Site content is informational
This site explains FinishPath's rescue-oriented offers, examples, and process in broad terms. Visiting the site, reviewing a case study, or submitting the application form does not automatically create a client relationship or obligate FinishPath to accept a project.
2) Paid work requires a separate written agreement
The $2,500 Rescue Audit, any follow-on rescue sprint, and any later implementation work require a separate written agreement or proposal covering the actual scope, fees, timing, deliverables, confidentiality, and ownership terms. That signed document governs the engagement.
3) Applications can be accepted, declined, or narrowed
FinishPath is intentionally selective. Applications may be declined when the situation is outside the stated fit, when the urgency is real but the available access is too limited, or when the product needs a different kind of help than a rescue-oriented engagement provides.
4) Pricing, examples, and timelines are guidance — not guarantees
Pricing notes, example scopes, audit deliverables, sprint fee bands, and turnaround expectations are provided to clarify the buying process. They can change over time and may shift based on complexity, access, or the real condition of the product once reviewed.
5) No promise of launch, revenue, or technical outcome
FinishPath is designed to reduce launch risk and help founders make stronger technical decisions around partially done products. But outcomes still depend on code quality, stack constraints, third-party systems, access, team follow-through, and the truthfulness of the information provided. The site does not promise any specific launch date, revenue result, fundraising outcome, or defect-free delivery.
6) You are responsible for what you submit
Please provide accurate information about the product, codebase, current blockers, access level, deadlines, and budget context. Rescue work is easier to evaluate when the situation is described honestly. FinishPath may pause or decline a review if essential details are missing or materially misleading.
7) Confidentiality and intellectual property are handled in the project agreement
Initial applications should avoid sending secrets, production credentials, or regulated data unless explicitly requested through a safer channel. Ownership of deliverables, reuse rights, confidentiality obligations, and any license terms are handled in the later engagement agreement rather than on this general website page.
8) Questions
If you need clarity before applying, use hello@finishpath.com or review the application page, deliverables page, and rescue sprint page.