{"id":4261,"date":"2026-07-12T06:41:57","date_gmt":"2026-07-12T06:41:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/?p=4261"},"modified":"2026-07-11T03:07:20","modified_gmt":"2026-07-11T03:07:20","slug":"ueni-growth-plan-test","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/ueni-growth-plan-review\/","title":{"rendered":"UENI Growth Plan 2026: Is the Marketing Team Worth It? \ud83d\udcca"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The UENI Growth plan costs <strong>$124.99\/mo<\/strong> and adds a <em>dedicated marketing team<\/em> to your website. That is the priciest tier \u2014 so the real question is simple: <strong>is it worth it?<\/strong> \ud83e\udd14<\/p>\n<p>Today I break down exactly what Growth includes, who it is for, the ROI math, and when to pick it over the cheaper plans. Honest, no fluff. \ud83d\udc47<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\u26a0\ufe0f <strong>Offenlegungs- und Genauigkeitshinweis:<\/strong> Einige Links sind Affiliate-Links \u2013 ich erhalte m\u00f6glicherweise eine Provision. <strong>F\u00fcr Sie entstehen keine zus\u00e4tzlichen Kosten.<\/strong>. Prices <strong>\u00e4ndern<\/strong> \u2014 best\u00e4tigen Sie auf der <a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.com\/en-us\/pricing\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">official UENI pricing page<\/a>.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<div style=\"margin:26px 0;padding:24px 26px;border-radius:16px;background:linear-gradient(135deg,rgba(255,90,60,.22),rgba(255,138,91,.14));border:1px solid rgba(255,255,255,.16);text-align:center\">\n<p style=\"font-size:18px;font-weight:800;margin:0 0 14px;color:#fff\">\ud83d\udcca Website + a marketing team, done for you<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.sjv.io\/3JQEAX\" style=\"display:inline-block;background:linear-gradient(110deg,#FF5A3C,#FF8A5B);color:#fff;padding:14px 36px;border-radius:50px;font-weight:800;text-decoration:none;font-size:16px\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">See UENI Growth \u2192<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/07\/ueni-ad3.png\" alt=\"UENI Growth plan \u2014 a dedicated marketing team\"><\/p>\n<h2>\ud83d\udccc Wichtigste Erkenntnisse<\/h2>\n<ul>\n<li>\ud83d\udcca <strong>$124.99\/mo<\/strong> (about $104\/mo yearly) + the <strong>$79 setup<\/strong> \u2014 everything in Ecommerce plus a marketing team.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83e\uddd1\u200d\ud83d\udcbc Adds a <strong>dedicated VIP growth team<\/strong>, custom marketing plan, monthly 1-on-1s, and <strong>2,000 words of content\/month<\/strong>.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83c\udfaf Worth it for <strong>established businesses<\/strong> that would otherwise pay an agency retainer.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udca1 If you are just getting online, start on <strong>Launch or Plus<\/strong> and grow into it.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h2>What&#39;s included \ud83d\udce6<\/h2>\n<p>The Growth plan gives you everything from Ecommerce, then the marketing layer:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\ud83e\uddd1\u200d\ud83d\udcbc A <strong>dedicated VIP growth team<\/strong><\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\uddfa\ufe0f A <strong>custom marketing plan<\/strong> for your business<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udcde <strong>Monthly 1-on-1 sessions<\/strong><\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udce3 <strong>Multi-channel marketing<\/strong> \u2014 email, social, ads, SEO, reputation<\/li>\n<li>\u270d\ufe0f <strong>2,000 words of fresh content<\/strong> written for you every month<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>So it is not just a website \u2014 it is a website <strong>plus<\/strong> an outsourced marketing department. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-pricing-explained\/\">Preisleitfaden<\/a> shows how it sits above the other tiers.<\/p>\n<h2>The ROI math \ud83e\uddee<\/h2>\n<p>A marketing agency retainer typically runs <strong>$1,000\u2013$5,000+\/mo.<\/strong> A part-time freelance marketer is often $500\u2013$2,000\/mo. The Growth plan bundles a growth team, a plan, monthly calls, multi-channel marketing, and content for <strong>$124.99\/mo.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The question is not &quot;is $125 a lot?&quot; It is &quot;what would this cost me elsewhere?&quot; Here is the comparison \ud83d\udc47<\/p>\n<p><svg viewbox=\"0 0 760 210\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\" role=\"img\" aria-label=\"Marketing cost comparison\">\n  <g font-family=\"Segoe UI, sans-serif\" fill=\"#cfd2de\" font-size=\"13\">\n    <text x=\"380\" y=\"26\" text-anchor=\"middle\" fill=\"#fff\" font-weight=\"800\" font-size=\"15\">Monthly cost for marketing help \ud83d\udcca (lower = better)<\/text>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"70\">\ud83c\udfe2 Marketing agency<\/text><rect x=\"240\" y=\"58\" width=\"470\" height=\"18\" rx=\"9\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"240\" y=\"58\" width=\"460\" height=\"18\" rx=\"9\" fill=\"#f43f5e\"\/><text x=\"690\" y=\"72\" text-anchor=\"end\" fill=\"#fff\" font-size=\"12\" font-weight=\"700\">$1,000\u2013$5,000<\/text>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"110\">\ud83d\udc64 Freelance marketer<\/text><rect x=\"240\" y=\"98\" width=\"470\" height=\"18\" rx=\"9\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"240\" y=\"98\" width=\"220\" height=\"18\" rx=\"9\" fill=\"#f59e0b\"\/><text x=\"470\" y=\"112\" fill=\"#fff\" font-size=\"12\" font-weight=\"700\">$500\u2013$2,000<\/text>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"150\">\ud83d\ude80 UENI Growth<\/text><rect x=\"240\" y=\"138\" width=\"470\" height=\"18\" rx=\"9\" fill=\"#23262f\"\/><rect x=\"240\" y=\"138\" width=\"60\" height=\"18\" rx=\"9\" fill=\"#37c978\"\/><text x=\"310\" y=\"152\" fill=\"#fff\" font-size=\"12\" font-weight=\"700\">$124.99<\/text>\n    <text x=\"30\" y=\"186\" font-size=\"12\" fill=\"#9aa0b5\">Growth bundles a team + plan + content \u2014 a fraction of agency retainers<\/text>\n  <\/g>\n<\/svg><\/p>\n<div style=\"margin:26px 0;padding:22px 26px;border-radius:16px;background:linear-gradient(135deg,rgba(255,138,91,.18),rgba(255,90,60,.18));border:1px solid rgba(255,255,255,.16);text-align:center\">\n<p style=\"font-size:17px;font-weight:800;margin:0 0 12px;color:#fff\">\ud83d\udca1 A marketing department for the price of a few coffees a day<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.sjv.io\/3JQEAX\" style=\"display:inline-block;background:linear-gradient(110deg,#FF8A5B,#FF5A3C);color:#fff;padding:12px 32px;border-radius:50px;font-weight:700;text-decoration:none\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Explore UENI Growth \u2192<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<h2>The content engine \u270d\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>Der <strong>2,000 words of fresh content per month<\/strong> deserve a spotlight. Fresh, relevant content is a genuine ranking factor over time \u2014 it gives Google more pages to rank and more reasons to see you as active and authoritative.<\/p>\n<p>Most small businesses never publish anything, because writing is a chore and takes time they do not have. Having it handled monthly is a quiet, compounding advantage. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-seo-google-ranking\/\">UENI SEO-Rezension<\/a> explains why content matters for rankings. \ud83d\udcc8<\/p>\n<h2>Who is Growth for? \ud83c\udfaf<\/h2>\n<p><strong>Worth it if you are:<\/strong><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\ud83c\udfea An <strong>established business<\/strong> with steady revenue and room to grow.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udce3 Someone who wants marketing <strong>fully outsourced<\/strong> \u2014 no learning ads, SEO, or content yourself.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udcb0 Currently considering (or paying) an <strong>agency retainer<\/strong> \u2014 Growth is far cheaper.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><strong>Not yet if you are:<\/strong><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\ud83c\udf31 Just getting your first website online \u2014 start on <strong>Launch<\/strong> ($24.99) or <strong>Plus<\/strong> ($59).<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udcb7 On a tight budget where every dollar counts \u2014 nail the basics first.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-launch-vs-plus\/\">Launch vs Plus guide<\/a> covers the entry plans, and my <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-review-2026\/\">vollst\u00e4ndige Rezension<\/a> covers the whole ladder.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/07\/ueni-cards.png\" alt=\"A website plus an outsourced marketing department\"><\/p>\n<h2>The readiness test: is your business actually at this stage? \ud83e\ude9c<\/h2>\n<p>Because Growth is the top of the ladder, the most important question is not whether the plan is good but whether your business is genuinely at the stage where it pays off, and there is a practical readiness test that answers this more reliably than ambition does. Ask three questions. First, is your foundation already working \u2014 a live professional site, a completed Google profile, reviews accumulating \u2014 such that added visibility would land on something that converts? Marketing poured onto a broken or absent foundation is wasted, which is why a business without those basics should start at Launch or Plus and climb later. Second, can your operation absorb more customers right now \u2014 do you have the capacity, the stock, the staff, the hours \u2014 such that additional enquiries become revenue rather than stress and declined work? A tradesperson booked solid for two months gains little from more leads until capacity grows; a restaurant with empty midweek tables gains immediately. Third, do you have the revenue stability to fund a quarter of the plan without anxiety, since marketing compounds over months and judging it on week two guarantees disappointment? Answer yes to all three and Growth is aimed at exactly you \u2014 an established business with headroom, a working foundation, and the patience to let consistency compound. Answer no to any, and the honest advice is to fix that gap first with the cheaper tiers, because the plan amplifies what exists rather than conjuring what does not. This self-test takes five minutes and prevents the most common Growth-plan mistake, which is buying amplification before there is anything ready to amplify.<\/p>\n<h2>What the monthly one-on-one is really for \ud83d\udcde<\/h2>\n<p>The monthly one-on-one session bundled into Growth reads like a minor perk on the feature list, but used properly it becomes the plan&#39;s steering wheel, and owners who understand this extract disproportionate value from it. Marketing for a small business is not a fire-and-forget missile; it is a sequence of experiments \u2014 which offers to push, which services to feature, which channels earn attention in your particular trade and town \u2014 and experiments need reviewing against results. The monthly call is where that review happens: what ran last month, what the numbers show, which enquiries arrived and from where, and what next month&#39;s emphasis should be, adjusted to the season, your capacity, and what the data revealed. For the owner, preparing ten minutes of ground truth for that call \u2014 how busy you actually were, which jobs you want more of, what customers mentioned \u2014 turns generic marketing into targeted marketing, because the team can only steer toward goals you articulate. Owners who skip or sleepwalk through the calls get competent generic output; owners who engage get a marketing operation that progressively tunes itself to their business, which is the difference between renting a service and directing one. Since the call costs nothing extra, engagement is pure return: it is the mechanism by which two thousand words of content become the <em>right<\/em> two thousand words, and by which ad and social effort concentrates where your margins actually live. Treat it as a board meeting for your growth, not a status update to endure, and the plan&#39;s ceiling rises accordingly.<\/p>\n<h2>The honest catches \u26a0\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<ul>\n<li>\ud83d\udcb5 <strong>$124.99\/mo is a real commitment<\/strong> \u2014 make sure your business can convert the extra visibility into revenue.<\/li>\n<li>\u23f3 Marketing is a <strong>compounding<\/strong> game \u2014 expect results over months, not days.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83e\udde9 It is a <strong>managed<\/strong> service, so you trade some control for convenience.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83c\udf31 If you have no site yet, this is <strong>overkill<\/strong> \u2014 grow into it.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-complaints-cons\/\">complaints &amp; cons guide<\/a> is honest about who should wait.<\/p>\n<h2>A quarter on Growth, realistically pictured \ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>To make the abstract concrete, walk through what a first quarter on the Growth plan typically looks like for a ready business, because the arc explains both the early quiet and the later payoff that owners should expect. In month one, the machinery assembles: the kickoff establishes your goals and voice, the custom marketing plan takes shape around your services and season, the first content pieces publish, and your social channels wake from dormancy to a steady pulse \u2014 while measurable results remain modest, because compounding starts slowly and this month is about building position, not harvesting it. Month two is where the surfaces multiply: several articles now index and begin catching their first searches, the consistent social presence starts registering with locals who see you repeatedly, early ad and promotion work drives its first measurable clicks, and the first &quot;I found you online&quot; enquiries trickle in \u2014 enough to confirm direction on the monthly call and steer emphasis toward what pulled. By month three, the elements reinforce one another: the content library is broad enough to catch a meaningful spread of searches, reputation work has nudged reviews upward, the retuned emphasis from two review calls has concentrated effort on your best-margin services, and the enquiry flow \u2014 now typically at or past the one-to-three-customer hurdle that pays for the plan \u2014 arrives with a steadiness that sporadic self-marketing never produced. None of this is dramatic in any single week, which is exactly the point: the plan replaces marketing-as-event with marketing-as-metabolism, and by the quarter&#39;s end the owner can judge it the only way marketing should be judged, against a ledger of enquiries that did not exist before. Businesses that give it that honest quarter rarely need persuading afterward; the pipeline argues for itself.<\/p>\n<h2>How to decide \ud83e\udded<\/h2>\n<p>Ask three questions:<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>\ud83d\udcb0 Am I already spending (or about to spend) on marketing help? \u2192 Growth likely saves money.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83d\udcc8 Can my business handle more leads right now? \u2192 If yes, Growth&#39;s visibility pays off.<\/li>\n<li>\ud83c\udf31 Is my website even live yet? \u2192 If no, start on Launch\/Plus first.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Match the plan to your <strong>stage.<\/strong> Growth is a scale-up tool, not a starter kit. \ud83c\udfaf<\/p>\n<h2>What outsourced marketing actually solves \ud83e\udde0<\/h2>\n<p>To judge whether the Growth plan earns its price, start with an honest look at the problem it exists to solve, because that problem is nearly universal among established small businesses and rarely named plainly. Almost every owner past the survival stage knows, in a vague and guilty way, that they &quot;should be doing marketing&quot; \u2014 posting consistently, running some ads, publishing content, managing their reputation \u2014 and almost none of them do it, not from ignorance but from arithmetic: marketing done properly is a genuine part-time job requiring hours every week plus skills that take years to sharpen, and those hours simply do not exist in a schedule already consumed by delivering the actual product or service. The result is the familiar cycle of sporadic effort \u2014 a burst of posts in January, an abandoned ad campaign in spring, a blog with three articles from two years ago \u2014 which produces little and confirms the owner&#39;s suspicion that marketing &quot;doesn&#39;t work for businesses like mine,&quot; when the truth is that <em>inconsistent<\/em> marketing doesn&#39;t work for any business. What an outsourced marketing team actually sells, then, is not cleverness but consistency: the emails go out, the content gets published, the channels stay active, the plan gets executed month after month regardless of how busy the owner&#39;s week was, because it is somebody&#39;s actual job rather than everybody&#39;s guilty afterthought. For the owner whose growth has stalled at the ceiling of word-of-mouth and whose marketing history is a graveyard of good intentions, that consistency is precisely the missing ingredient, and it is worth understanding the plan as the purchase of that ingredient rather than of any individual deliverable.<\/p>\n<h2>The 2,000 words of content, properly valued \u270d\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>Among the plan&#39;s components, the two thousand words of monthly content deserves a closer look than it usually gets, because content is the deliverable whose value compounds most and whose absence is most invisible. Fresh, relevant content serves two audiences at once: it gives search engines new pages to index and rank \u2014 steadily widening the net of searches your business can appear for \u2014 and it gives customers evidence of an active, knowledgeable operation worth trusting. Over a year, the plan&#39;s allocation amounts to twenty-four thousand words, roughly a dozen solid articles answering the questions your customers actually search: the how-much, the how-to, the which-option queries that precede almost every purchase in every trade. Priced against alternatives, a competent freelance writer charges anywhere from a hundred to several hundred dollars per comparable article, so the content alone plausibly accounts for the majority of the Growth plan&#39;s fee before counting the strategy, the ads work, the social management, or the monthly consultations. But the deeper point is what consistent content does over time that sporadic content cannot: each published piece is a permanent asset that keeps attracting its slice of searches indefinitely, so a business that publishes monthly for two years owns a compounding library that a competitor starting today cannot quickly replicate. Most small businesses publish nothing, ever, because writing is slow and unfamiliar; a plan that quietly ships publish-ready words every month converts that universal weakness into a durable advantage, and for owners who evaluate it as &quot;articles I would never have written otherwise,&quot; the math turns favorable quickly.<\/p>\n<h2>Reading the ROI like an investor \ud83d\udcca<\/h2>\n<p>The Growth plan&#39;s price triggers sticker hesitation in owners who compare it to the tiers below, but the correct comparison is to what growth-stage marketing costs through any other door, and that comparison reframes the number entirely. A marketing agency retainer for a small business starts around a thousand dollars monthly and climbs steeply, for a service whose scope often resembles what Growth bundles; a competent freelance marketer runs five hundred to two thousand a month; hiring even a very junior in-house marketer costs several thousand monthly once wages and overheads are counted; and the do-it-yourself option costs the owner&#39;s evenings, which are both finite and better spent. Against that field, one hundred twenty-five dollars monthly is not a premium price but a floor-level entry into professionally executed marketing, achievable only because the provider runs the same systematized playbook across many businesses at once \u2014 the identical scale economics that make the website itself affordable. The investor&#39;s question is then simple: what does the plan need to produce to pay for itself? For most established businesses, the answer is one to three additional customers a month, depending on ticket size \u2014 a modest hurdle for the combined effect of consistent content, active social presence, managed ads, and reputation work aimed at people already searching in your area. Owners should hold the plan to exactly that standard, watching enquiries over a quarter the way an investor watches a position, and the monthly one-on-one calls exist precisely to review that evidence together. Marketing spend that cannot be measured deserves skepticism; marketing spend measured against a two-customer hurdle deserves, for most established businesses, a serious look. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/ueni-pricing-explained\/\">Preisleitfaden<\/a> sets the tier in context of the full ladder.<\/p>\n<h2>Growth versus hiring versus doing it yourself \ud83e\udd4a<\/h2>\n<p>The final comparison worth making explicit is the three real alternatives an established owner weighs against the plan, because each fails in a characteristic way that the bundled team is designed to avoid. Doing it yourself fails on consistency, as covered earlier \u2014 not because owners lack intelligence but because marketing is structurally the first casualty of a busy week, and a channel worked sporadically returns almost nothing, making the DIY option less &quot;free&quot; than &quot;expensive in invisible ways.&quot; Hiring in-house fails on economics at this scale: even a junior marketer costs several thousand monthly all-in, needs management you must provide, and represents a fixed commitment that a seasonal or variable business cannot comfortably carry \u2014 a sensible move at twenty employees, rarely at three. Engaging an agency fails on fit and floor price: retainers start where Growth&#39;s price ends and climb quickly, minimum engagements favor bigger clients, and a small local business often receives the junior team&#39;s leftover attention while paying senior-brochure rates. The bundled model threads these failures deliberately \u2014 systematized enough to hit a small-business price point, professional enough to beat the owner&#39;s stolen evenings, scaled enough that your account is normal rather than negligible \u2014 and its integration with the website and profile you already run there removes the coordination tax of introducing an outside agency to somebody else&#39;s build. None of this makes it the right answer for every business forever; a company that outgrows it will graduate to dedicated hires or a boutique agency with genuine needs those options serve. But as the first serious marketing commitment for an established small business, it occupies a slot the alternatives simply do not: professional, consistent, measured, and priced inside the reach of the businesses that need it most. My <a href=\"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/best-ueni-alternatives\/\">Alternativenleitfaden<\/a> maps the wider landscape of choices.<\/p>\n<h2>H\u00e4ufig gestellte Fragen \u2753<\/h2>\n<p><strong>What does the UENI Growth plan include?<\/strong><br \/>\nEverything in Ecommerce plus a dedicated growth team, custom marketing plan, monthly 1-on-1s, multi-channel marketing, and 2,000 words of content monthly. \ud83d\udcca<\/p>\n<p><strong>How much is UENI Growth?<\/strong><br \/>\n$124.99\/mo (about $104 yearly) plus the $79 setup. \ud83d\udcb5<\/p>\n<p><strong>Is it worth it?<\/strong><br \/>\nFor established businesses that would otherwise pay an agency, yes \u2014 it is far cheaper. For brand-new sites, start smaller. \u2696\ufe0f<\/p>\n<p><strong>Can I upgrade to Growth later?<\/strong><br \/>\nYes \u2014 start on a lower plan and move up when you are ready to scale marketing. \u2b06\ufe0f<\/p>\n<p><strong>Does it really include content?<\/strong><br \/>\nYes \u2014 2,000 words of fresh content written for you every month. \u270d\ufe0f<\/p>\n<h2>The verdict \u2696\ufe0f<\/h2>\n<p>The UENI Growth plan is essentially an <strong>outsourced marketing department bolted onto your website<\/strong> \u2014 a growth team, a plan, monthly calls, multi-channel marketing, and content, for a fraction of an agency retainer. \ud83c\udfc6<\/p>\n<p>Meine Bewertung: <strong>4 \/ 5<\/strong> for its target user \u2014 the established business ready to scale. If you are just getting online, it is overkill; start on Launch or Plus and grow into it. But for owners who want marketing fully handled, the value versus an agency is genuinely strong. \ud83d\ude80<\/p>\n<p>The clean way to close is with the question that actually decides this tier: not &quot;is one hundred twenty-five dollars a month a lot&quot; but &quot;what is my growth currently costing me by not happening.&quot; An established business with a working foundation, spare capacity, and no consistent marketing is leaving a measurable stream of customers unclaimed every month \u2014 customers who search, compare, and choose whoever showed up with content, presence, and reviews. The Growth plan exists to claim that stream at a price only systematization makes possible, and it asks in return only what any marketing honestly requires: a quarter of patience, ten engaged minutes a month on a call, and the willingness to measure results like an investor rather than a lottery player. If your readiness test came back yes on all three counts, that is a fair bargain aimed directly at you, and the sensible next step is simply to take the plan for its one measured quarter and let your own real enquiry ledger \u2014 not this review, not any review \u2014 render the final and only verdict that truly matters for your particular business.<\/p>\n<div style=\"margin:30px 0;padding:26px;border-radius:18px;background:linear-gradient(135deg,rgba(255,90,60,.24),rgba(255,138,91,.16));border:1px solid rgba(255,255,255,.18);text-align:center\">\n<p style=\"font-size:19px;font-weight:800;margin:0 0 8px;color:#fff\">\ud83d\udcca Website + marketing team \u2014 agency value, small price<\/p>\n<p style=\"margin:0 0 16px;color:rgba(255,255,255,.85)\">$124.99\/mo + $79 setup \u00b7 30-day money-back guarantee \ud83d\udee1\ufe0f<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.sjv.io\/3JQEAX\" style=\"display:inline-block;background:linear-gradient(110deg,#FF5A3C,#FF8A5B);color:#fff;padding:15px 40px;border-radius:50px;font-weight:800;text-decoration:none;font-size:17px\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Explore UENI Growth \u2192<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<p><em>Prices were accurate at the time of writing and may change \u2014 always confirm on the <a href=\"https:\/\/ueni.com\/en-us\/pricing\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">official UENI pricing page<\/a>Enth\u00e4lt Affiliate-Links; allgemeine Informationen, keine Beratung.<\/em> \u270d\ufe0f<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>UENI Growth plan review 2026 \u2014 is the $124.99\/mo marketing team worth it? What&#8217;s included, who it&#8217;s for, the ROI math, and when to pick it over Ecommerce or Plus.<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4260,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"site-sidebar-layout":"default","site-content-layout":"","ast-site-content-layout":"default","site-content-style":"default","site-sidebar-style":"default","ast-global-header-display":"","ast-banner-title-visibility":"","ast-main-header-display":"","ast-hfb-above-header-display":"","ast-hfb-below-header-display":"","ast-hfb-mobile-header-display":"","site-post-title":"","ast-breadcrumbs-content":"","ast-featured-img":"","footer-sml-layout":"","ast-disable-related-posts":"","theme-transparent-header-meta":"","adv-header-id-meta":"","stick-header-meta":"","header-above-stick-meta":"","header-main-stick-meta":"","header-below-stick-meta":"","astra-migrate-meta-layouts":"default","ast-page-background-enabled":"default","ast-page-background-meta":{"desktop":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-5)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"tablet":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"mobile":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""}},"ast-content-background-meta":{"desktop":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-4)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"tablet":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-4)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"mobile":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-4)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""}},"_kadence_starter_templates_imported_post":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[472],"tags":[575,473,572,574,573,483],"class_list":["post-4261","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-ueni","tag-done-for-you-marketing","tag-ueni","tag-ueni-growth-plan","tag-ueni-growth-review","tag-ueni-marketing","tag-ueni-plans"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4261","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4261"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4261\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4264,"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4261\/revisions\/4264"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/4260"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4261"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4261"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/yamuparkoti.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4261"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}