One senior. Seven clients. Fifteen years in search.
Whitewater Digital Marketing is the SEO consultancy people think they want when they hire an agency. Senior expertise from first call through quarterly reviews. No junior handoffs, no account managers, no scope arguments at renewal.
From first call to ongoing work.
Every engagement starts the same way. Whether it ends in a one-time audit, a build, or a multi-year retainer depends on what fits.
Free consultation
Thirty minutes, no pitch deck. Tye pulls your site up live, walks the technical gaps, and tells you what would actually move things forward.
Proposal & scope
A specific proposal tailored to what came out of the consultation. Itemized. No retainer minimums, no "we'll figure it out as we go."
Kickoff & setup
Access shared, goals documented, communication channel agreed. Most engagements ship something meaningful in the first two weeks.
Ongoing work
Monthly cadence for retainer clients. Quarterly reviews to look at progress against goals. The senior stays on the site for the duration.
Why Whitewater is built this way.
Whitewater started where most senior SEO consultants end up after a decade in agencies: tired of watching the work get worse as accounts scale.
Most SEO agencies grow by adding clients faster than they add senior staff. The math doesn't work. By year three, the senior who sold the work is on five other accounts and the actual execution sits with juniors who learned SEO from someone else's blog post. The reports get longer. The results get quieter. The senior stops being the one writing the report and starts being the one signing it.
Whitewater is built the other way. Seven clients at a time, every hour billed is the senior's hour, no account manager forwarding tickets to a team that hasn't seen the site since onboarding. The model trades scale for depth. Twenty clients gets you a logo wall. Seven gets you actual outcomes.
The reason the cap exists isn't philosophy. It's arithmetic. A senior with seven active clients can give each one roughly 20 to 30 quality hours per month, year-round, without the work degrading. Add an eighth client and someone's hours have to come from somewhere. Either Whitewater hires a junior to absorb the overflow, which breaks the model, or one of the existing clients starts getting less of the senior, which breaks the trust. Neither happens here.
The work that comes out the other side is steadier and more compounding than what most agencies produce. Not because Whitewater is uniquely brilliant. Because the same person stays on the site for years and the context never gets lost.
Where the standard comes from.
In April 2011 I was a senior at the University of Alabama, working nights and going to school. That same week I had taken a job reviewing search results, and it was the first time I understood that this thing called SEO could change a business. Four days later I almost didn't live to do anything with it.
April 27th is a date Tuscaloosa doesn't forget. I left for my night shift a few minutes after five. The sirens had been going, but my head was buried in coursework and I had no real idea how bad it already was. Driving out of my neighborhood, I came to an open stretch at a stop sign and looked to my left. It was the largest wall cloud I had ever seen, close enough that a telephone pole and a mattress were tumbling through the air like paper. There was nowhere to go. It was already on top of me.
I knew in that instant I was about to die. I had been raised by loving Christian parents, but for about a year I'd been quietly doubting whether God was even real. Staring at that storm, the doubt was simply gone. I knew He was real, and I was afraid for my soul.
Then came something I still can't fully explain. I saw a house in my mind, an office for a local restaurant a few blocks away, and something told me to go to it. I floored the accelerator into the driveway of a place I had never been and knew no one. I got out into the full force of it and ran to the door and banged on it. There was no time left. All I could do was drop into a ball in the corner of a red brick wall on that porch.
The house came down on top of me. I woke with bricks stacked to my chest and a clear view straight over what was left of the roof. The tornado was already half a mile gone. I turned to call for help and a man was already sprinting toward me, his eyes locked on mine the whole way with the danger still around him. He worked like a machine to pull the bricks off. The last one, a heavy one, had broken my leg nearly in half.
The moment he freed me, two nursing students appeared and tied a tourniquet above the break. A sheriff pulled up right then and drove me in, and the hospital already held hundreds of people 20 minutes after the storm. They tagged my wrist with an ID that read Disaster Amsterdam. I was sure I'd be waiting for hours. Two minutes later they called that name and took me up to surgery. The clock in the operating room read 5:38. The tornado had reached me at 5:12. From buried under a leveled house to an operating table in 26 minutes.
That was God. I have never doubted Him since, and it set the direction for everything after, including, in a way most people wouldn't connect, how this business runs. Luke 6:31 says to do to others as you would have them do to you, so I treat your business the way I would want mine treated. I tell you the truth and I do what I said I'd do and I stay on the work instead of handing you to someone who has never seen your site. Someone stayed with me on that porch when there was no reason I should have walked away from it. The least I can do is show up with that same steadiness for the people who trust me with their livelihood.
Three principles that shape the work.
Every other decision flows from these. They're not values on a wall, they're the operating constraints.
No junior handoffs, ever
The audit, the build, the content strategy, the monthly reporting, the link outreach, the technical implementation. Every hour billed is the senior's hour. There's no junior team in the background, no account manager forwarding tickets, no contractor pool. If Whitewater bills you for 12 hours of technical work, those 12 hours happened in front of Tye's keyboard.
The work compounds when context stays
SEO is a long game. The site that's still ranking and converting three years later is the one where the same person has been making the calls the whole time. Whitewater is built around staying on the work for years, not optimizing for the next renewal call. The benefit of capping clients shows up in year two, not year one.
Plain language over PDF theater
Most SEO reports are 60 pages of charts that the client doesn't read and the agency doesn't expect them to. Whitewater reports are short. Plain English. What got done, what moved, what's queued, what's blocked. The goal of a report is to communicate, not to justify the invoice.
What's actually on the desk.
A senior consultant is only as good as the tools they reach for. Here's what runs the day-to-day work at Whitewater.
Build & develop
- WordPress on managed hosting
- Divi theme builder & custom CSS
- LiteSpeed Cache for Core Web Vitals
- WPCode for tracking and schema
- Custom Python tooling for automation
Audit & analyze
- Proprietary site crawler
- Proprietary ranking simulator
- Search Console & GA4 for signals
- Custom Python SEO audit tool
- Page speed and Core Web Vitals diagnostics
Track & report
- Proprietary local rank tracker for GBP
- Custom dashboards built per client
- Conversion tracking and tag setup
- Call tracking integration
- Plain language monthly reports
Want to see if Whitewater is a fit?
Book a free consultation. Tye pulls your site up live, walks the gaps, and tells you straight whether the seven-client roster has room or whether you'd be better off with another shop. Either way, you leave the call with a clearer picture of what your site needs.