Briefing pages for decisions that should not start with guessing.
IDXNetwork publishes clear one-page guides that help people understand what matters before they call, buy, repair, remove, replace, or choose.
Each briefing focuses on one practical decision point: what details matter, what not to assume, and what to know before taking the next step.
Current Briefing Pages
This test collection covers different categories of real-world uncertainty: removal and hauling, home repair diagnosis, product decisions, outdoor structures, service-call preparation, and safety-adjacent property issues.
Hot Tub Removal: What to Know Before You Call
Access, stairs, decks, electrical status, water, hauling, disposal, and cleanup questions before removing a hot tub.
Read briefing → Home Repair DiagnosisBreaker Keeps Tripping: What to Know Before Calling an Electrician
Appliances, rooms affected, timing, moisture, smells, heat, buzzing, and safety signs worth noting before the call.
Read briefing → Product DecisionShower Chair vs Transfer Bench: What to Know Before Buying
Tub type, bathroom layout, user mobility, seat width, height, weight rating, drainage, and caregiver setup questions.
Read briefing → Outdoor StructureRetaining Wall Repair: What to Know Before You Call
Leaning walls, cracks, bulging, drainage problems, soil movement, nearby structures, access, and warning signs.
Read briefing → Service-Call PreparationBefore Calling Appliance Repair: What Details Actually Help
Noise, leaks, error codes, smells, timing, power issues, model information, and what to observe before calling.
Coming next → Safety-Adjacent PropertyDead Tree Near Power Lines: What to Know Before Calling
Tree condition, line proximity, location, access, utility involvement, and why not to touch or trim near power lines.
Coming next →What These Pages Are Testing
IDXNetwork is a small briefing-page experiment. Instead of publishing broad “ultimate guides,” each page is built around the moment before action: before the call, before the purchase, before the repair, before the removal, before the wrong assumption turns into a tiny expensive circus.
- Situation first The page starts with the real-world problem that brought the reader there.
- Decision details Each briefing identifies the facts, constraints, warning signs, and variables that matter.
- Checklist close The reader leaves with a practical list of details to gather before taking the next step.