What cookies are
A cookie is a small text file that a website asks your browser to store on your device. On a return visit, your browser sends the cookie back, which lets the site remember things — that you're logged in, what's in your cart, or (in the less charming cases) which ads to follow you around with. Cookies set by the site you're visiting are called first-party cookies; cookies set by other companies whose code is embedded in the page are called third-party cookies. Similar technologies — tracking pixels, local storage, device fingerprinting — do comparable jobs, so this policy covers those too.
What this site uses today
Here is the complete list, verified against our own build:
- First-party cookies: none. This site does not set any cookies of its own.
- Analytics cookies: none. No Google Analytics, no session recording, no heatmaps.
- Advertising cookies: none. No ad pixels, no retargeting tags, no data shared with advertising networks.
Because the site sets no cookies, there is nothing for a cookie banner to ask you about — which is why you didn't see one.
Two third-party connections do exist, and while neither is a cookie set by this site, honesty means listing them:
- Google Fonts. The site loads its typefaces from Google's font servers (fonts.googleapis.com and fonts.gstatic.com). When your browser fetches a font file, it sends your IP address to Google — that's how the internet delivers files. Google states it does not use the Fonts API to set cookies, but the request itself is a data transfer to Google, and we think you should know about it. Google's own privacy policy governs that request.
- Google Calendar booking. If — and only if — you click a "Book a strategy call" link, you leave this site and land on a Google Calendar appointment page (calendar.app.google). That page belongs to Google, and Google sets its own cookies there under its own policies. Nothing happens until you click; simply browsing this site never contacts Google Calendar.
One more transparency note that isn't a cookie at all: the site is hosted on Netlify, and like any web host, Netlify processes visitor IP addresses in its server logs to deliver pages and protect against abuse. More on that in our Privacy Policy.
What changes if we add analytics
At some point we may add a measurement tool such as Google Analytics 4 — we're a marketing consultancy, and knowing which pages help people is useful. If that day comes, here's the commitment: this Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy get updated before the tool goes live, the "Last updated" date at the top of this page changes so you can tell, and where the law requires it — for example, for visitors in the EU, UK, and other consent-based jurisdictions — we will ask for your consent before any analytics cookie is set. No silent additions, no retroactive fine print.
How to control cookies
Even though this site gives your browser nothing to manage, you can control cookies globally in your browser settings: every major browser (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge) lets you view, block, or delete cookies, refuse third-party cookies entirely, or browse in a private window that discards them when you close it. Blocking cookies will not break anything on this site, because nothing here depends on them. Check your browser's help pages under "cookies" or "site data" for the exact steps.
Contact
Questions about cookies, this policy, or your data are answered by a person, not a ticket queue. Email ceo@amconsultingmarketing.com — that address reaches the data controller for AM Consulting Marketing, a marketing consultancy operating from Florida, USA. For how we handle the information you actively send us through our forms, see the Privacy Policy.
Prefer a form? Reach us through the contact page.