Contact Etavrian

Send the growth problem in its real shape

You do not need a polished brief before reaching out. A messy but honest note is often more useful than a long document that hides the real constraint.

Send the site, the channel, the goal, what changed recently, and what decision you are trying to make. From there, the first job is to decide whether this needs an audit, account review, roadmap, rebuild, or a smaller working session.

Send a useful first brief without writing from scratch

Use this when you do not want to write a blank email. The form opens an email draft with the right prompts; access and sensitive data can wait.

A live URL is enough for the first read.
Pick the area where the current decision is stuck.
This keeps the reply tied to the business outcome.
A short, honest version is better than a polished brief.
Optional, but useful for avoiding unrealistic recommendations.
Choose the response style that fits your buying process.

What to include in the first message

You can keep the first note short. These details reduce back-and-forth and help us avoid guessing.

01

The surface we should review

Send the website URL and a one-line description of the business, market, or offer.

02

The area that feels stuck

Name the channel or problem area: SEO, Google Ads, PPC, tracking, conversion, lead quality, or unclear growth direction.

03

The commercial target

Share the outcome you care about: qualified leads, pipeline, ROAS, lower CAC, margin protection, revenue, or a clearer roadmap.

04

The trigger

Mention what changed recently: traffic drop, CPC spike, worse lead quality, migration, new competitor, budget shift, or stalled campaign.

05

The operating limits

Add constraints that matter: budget range, ad spend, timeline, internal dev capacity, sales follow-up, or approvals needed.

What happens after you reach out

A good first step should reduce uncertainty. It should not push you into a large scope before the problem is understood.

01

Initial read

We review the site, account context, or issue you shared and check whether there is enough signal to advise properly.

02

Bottleneck map

We separate likely SEO, PPC, tracking, offer, implementation, and sales-quality problems so the conversation stays concrete.

03

Recommended next move

We suggest the smallest useful next step: quick review, paid audit, account cleanup, roadmap, test plan, or ongoing support.

04

Secure access later

If access is needed, it comes later through proper account invites. Do not send passwords, recovery codes, customer exports, or payment details.

Good reasons to reach out

These are common reasons people contact Etavrian. If your situation is close, send it anyway. We can narrow it from there.

SEO audit or roadmap

You need a practical audit, technical cleanup sequence, content direction, competitor read, or SEO rescue plan.

Google Ads account review

You need the account to explain itself better: structure, tracking, queries, budgets, conversion quality, and what to test next.

Growth diagnosis

You are unsure whether the blocker is traffic, conversion, tracking, sales handoff, offer clarity, or team execution capacity.

Second opinion

You already have a team or vendor, but need sharper priorities, an outside read, or a more useful decision sequence.

Before you send anything sensitive

A few small details reduce anxiety before the first message.

Do I need to share access now?

No. A URL and context are enough for the first read. Access should happen later through proper platform invites.

Should I mention budget?

Yes, if it affects the recommendation. A realistic range prevents advice that looks smart but cannot be implemented.

Can the scope stay small?

Usually, yes. The first step can be small: audit, account read, roadmap, consultation, or a practical month-one plan.

Can you work with my team?

Yes. We can act as the operator, reviewer, or strategy layer that helps your internal team make better channel decisions.

Other inquiries are fine, but clarity helps.

For messages outside SEO, Google Ads, PPC, audits, or growth strategy, keep the note short and clear. We may not be the right place for guest posts, tool demos, recruiter messages, or generic vendor pitches.

For client work, the most useful first message is still the same: the site, the business goal, the current blocker, and what decision you want to make next.

Start with context, not a perfect brief.

Send the website, the channel, the goal, and the part that feels unclear. We will use that context to suggest the smallest useful next step.