Brand and Website Review
A combined review of how the brand and website work together as one public-facing business presence.
A serious refresh across brand and website so the public-facing business matches the inside business.
A combined review of how the brand and website work together as one public-facing business presence.
A deeper identity and messaging foundation for businesses that need to look serious, explain themselves clearly, and grow with consistency.
A stronger brand and website system for businesses that need to look more credible, explain themselves more clearly, and support better sales conversations.
A comprehensive brand, website, and sales presence system for businesses that need a more complete public-facing foundation.
A combined review of how the brand and website work together as one public-facing business presence.
A deeper identity and messaging foundation for businesses that need to look serious, explain themselves clearly, and grow with consistency.
A stronger brand and website system for businesses that need to look more credible, explain themselves more clearly, and support better sales conversations.
Buying steps in the wrong order is the most common way good budgets get spent on the wrong fix. The recommended sequence above is the order we would buy it in if we owned the business.
Rebuilding the website before the offer or identity is settled. The new site amplifies the old confusion.
Investing in local visibility before the website can convert the visit. Attention without a path leaks.
Hiring a junior in-house marketer before the brand foundation exists. The marketer ends up doing brand work, badly.
Treating a logo refresh as a brand system. Touchpoints still look like five different businesses.
Sending this inquiry brings the message to studio leadership. You will receive a real reply in plain English with a recommended next step, not a sales script.
Booking opens Calendly. You receive a confirmation. Send a short context note before the call so the session opens on the real question, not the warm-up.
Most weak outcomes come from solving the wrong problem first. Read the diagnosis rows and pick the level of help that fits.
If two symptoms are true at once, an audit or a 30 minute call names the sequence before you spend on the wrong fix.
If the deliverable is already obvious (a logo system, a page rewrite, a listing kit) and the outcome is well known.
If the issue crosses brand, website, and content, and needs coordinated work shaped by commercial judgment.
If the starting point is genuinely unclear. Thirty minutes usually names the strongest first move.
Made by Kostaja Ltd.