Every Ghost Zero engagement runs the same five-phase protocol — Audit, Architect, Activate, Amplify, Anchor. Below: what each phase contains, how hard it runs, and what you're holding when it ends.
The first twelve weeks are identical for everyone. What gets built on top is yours.
The six services aren't a menu — they're intakes on one engine. The protocol below is how the engine gets installed.
Phases overlap on purpose — the architecture starts before the audit closes, and the launch is being prepared while the architecture is still warm. Click a bar to jump to the phase.
We start with no opinions and read-only access. Two weeks later you get a written verdict naming the three things actually standing between you and growth — and what each one is costing you.
Your website and funnels, Google Business Profile, ad accounts, CRM and follow-up flows, tracking and attribution, review profile, and how the phone actually gets answered. We look at what your last twenty leads experienced, end to end. The audit is forensic, not flattering — if the problem isn't marketing, the verdict says so.
"Sometimes the audit ends the engagement. The verdict says the bottleneck is capacity, or pricing, or hiring — not marketing. Saying so costs us a contract and earns us the next three referrals."
Before anything gets built, it gets drawn. The position you'll own, the offer structure, the site architecture, the follow-up flows, and the measurement plan — on paper, approved, before week four.
The position is one sentence — the thing you can claim that competitors can't. Under it: the offer and pricing presentation, the page-by-page site map, the lead-handling flow (what happens in the first five minutes after someone calls or fills a form), and the scoreboard we'll all be judged by. Nothing ambiguous survives this phase.
"The drawing is the argument. If we can't defend a page or a flow on paper, we don't build it. Changing a line on a drawing costs nothing; changing a launched system costs weeks."
The blueprint leaves the paper. Site built and launched, CRM and follow-up automation live, ads on, profile optimized — and the scoreboard is wired before any traffic is bought.
A fast, owned website built to convert — not rented from a page builder. The CRM with instant text-back, pipelines, and reminders so no lead waits. Google and Local Services Ads tuned to the position. The Business Profile rebuilt. Call tracking and form tracking proving where every lead came from. Launch is a checklist, not a ribbon-cutting.
"Tracking ships first. It's the least glamorous deliverable and the one everything else depends on — if we can't see it, we refuse to spend against it."
Four weeks of real data tell us the truth. Budget moves toward what's producing booked jobs, and everything that isn't gets killed in writing — channel, ad, or page.
Every week ends with a short memo: what's working, what's not, what we killed, and where the budget moved. Keywords that spend without booking die. Pages that don't convert get rebuilt or removed. The compounding layers — SEO, content, reviews — get fed while paid channels are held to a number.
"Knowing what to stop doing is worth more than knowing what to start. The kill list is the report most operators have never received from an agency — what we stopped, and why."
The first twelve weeks are identical for everyone. Anchor is where engagements diverge — the system is live, the numbers are honest, and you choose how much of it we keep running.
Keep us running it. The operating engagement — we run the system, you run the business. Most common.
Scale it up. New fronts come online — more channels, more content, more territory.
Take it in-house. Everything is in your accounts already. We document, hand off, and stay reachable.
"The protocol is identical because that's how you guarantee a result. What's built on top of it is yours — and it stays yours. Every account, every asset, your name on all of it from day one."
Every Ghost Zero engagement starts with the same five clauses. They're not marketing copy — they're the working agreement, and they're why the protocol can be identical for everyone.
The audit ends in a document that names what's broken and what it's worth — in plain numbers, in writing. Not a slide deck of observations.
Founder-led, no hand-off to a junior team after the contract signs. Fewer engagements, taken seriously.
No ad dollar is spent until measurement is wired. We don't operate on vanity numbers, even when asked to.
What we stop doing — and why — is documented in the weekly memo. You always know where the budget moved.
Website, CRM, ad accounts, content, tracking — built in your accounts, under your name. If we part ways, nothing is held hostage.