Start the Devanta audit with the public URL first, then turn visible friction into prioritized action.
This is the public entry point into Growth OS. Devanta begins with what buyers and search engines can already see on the site, then turns those visible signals into clearer implementation direction.
The public-URL-first audit model keeps the first step clear, practical, and easier to act on.
Growth OS starts where the business is already visible. That lets Devanta identify what the website is communicating today, where trust or visibility breaks down, and what the best next move should be.
Devanta captures the top-level business context needed to review the site in a commercially useful way.
The first pass focuses on the visible layer: structure, clarity, trust markers, and the conversion path.
The output becomes implementation guidance, recurring fit, or a larger rebuild recommendation when needed.
The first pass is intentionally commercial, visible, and implementation-aware.
The public review focuses on the visible site layer first so the business gets a clearer answer faster: fix and improve, move into recurring support, or scope a larger rebuild.
The first review looks at the public website before private access, analytics, or long workshops are required.
The goal is not a vague audit PDF. The goal is clearer next actions for visibility, trust, structure, and delivery.
This intake is the first step into recurring implementation, a rebuild scope, or a more custom system recommendation.
Growth OS keeps the intake structured so the next layer can connect cleanly into real implementation.
The data captured here is intentionally structured for a future review queue, audit workflow, and Supabase-backed intake pipeline. That keeps the public site aligned with the system Devanta is actually building.
If you already know the business needs a rebuild or recurring execution, Devanta can move from intake into scope faster.
Use the audit intake for the public URL-first review, or book a call if you already know the next decision is larger than a first-pass audit.