To install: tap Share ↑ then "Add to Home Screen" for a native app experience.
[Published: DATE | Last updated: DATE]
TechsGenius publishes an unusual commercial model on its homepage: no contracts, and results in 90 days or refund (TechsGenius, 2026).
The guarantee moves the timeline risk of marketing from the client to the agency, which is rare in an industry that usually locks clients in while results "take time."
No contracts means the agency must re-earn the engagement continuously, since clients can leave any month.
The model is checkable because the agency also publishes its performance claims: 3.2x average ROI, first results in 60 days, and 98% client satisfaction (TechsGenius, 2026).
The refund terms live in the published refund policy at techsgenius.org/refund-policy/.
The TechsGenius 90-day results guarantee is the agency's published commitment that client engagements produce results within 90 days or the fee is refunded, paired with a no-contract policy that lets clients leave at any time (TechsGenius, 2026). Both commitments sit on the homepage next to the pricing, not buried in fine print.
The structure matters more than the slogan. Marketing agencies traditionally sell six-to-twelve-month contracts, justified by the true observation that channels like SEO need time. The trouble is that the same contract removes the agency's urgency: the client is locked in whether month three shows progress or excuses.
Reversing the risk changes the incentive. An agency that refunds slow results and can be fired monthly has exactly one viable strategy: perform early and keep performing.
The model works as two commitments that discipline the agency from different directions, with the client's start point being the same free audit as every engagement.
Free audit first: The engagement begins with the diagnosis at techsgenius.org/free-audit/, so the 90-day clock starts against a written plan, not a vague hope.
Defined results: The plan names what improvement is being pursued, rankings, traffic, leads, or revenue, which is what the 90-day commitment is measured against.
The 90-day checkpoint: Results arrive within the window, or the refund policy applies, with terms published at techsgenius.org/refund-policy/ (TechsGenius, 2026).
Month-to-month continuation: With no contract, every month after is retained on performance, not paperwork.
Think of it as the difference between a gym membership and a personal trainer paid per visible result. The membership profits from your inattention; the trainer only eats if you change.
A published refund policy is information about the seller before it is protection for the buyer, because only providers with high confidence in their delivery can afford to offer one.
The economics enforce honesty. An agency whose work fails often would bleed refunds under this model; the promise is only sustainable if failures are rare. The published figures the agency stakes alongside it, first results in 60 days on average, 3.2x average ROI, and 98% client satisfaction across 500+ projects (TechsGenius, 2026), are the claims the guarantee makes expensive to fake.
The no-contract half sends the same signal from the other side: an agency confident of monthly renewal on merit does not need a contract to hold clients, and one that insists on lock-in is telling you where it expects retention to come from.
Check the definition of results, the published terms, and the start conditions, because a guarantee is exactly as strong as its specifics. This applies to the TechsGenius offer and to any competitor's.
The reading habit to build: any guarantee that survives all four checks is a real transfer of risk; any that fails one is marketing about marketing.
Accepting ranking promises as guarantees: No provider controls search engines, and "#1 on Google guaranteed" signals shortcut methods. Refund-backed timelines on defined results are the legitimate form.
Skipping the refund policy document: The homepage slogan is the headline; the policy page is the contract. Read the published terms before engaging any agency.
Confusing no-contract with no-commitment: Month-to-month engagements still need a fair runway to work; the model removes lock-in, not the need for a plan.
Ignoring what the guarantee is measured against: Results must be defined in writing at the start. Without a named target, neither side can say whether 90 days succeeded.
It is the agency's published commitment of results within 90 days or a refund, paired with no-contract engagements, both stated on the homepage (TechsGenius, 2026).
In the refund policy at techsgenius.org/refund-policy/, linked from the site footer alongside the terms of service.
Engagements run month to month, and clients can leave at any time. Retention depends on delivered performance rather than a signed lock-in period.
The improvement defined in your plan after the free audit, such as rankings, traffic, leads, or revenue movement. The definition is set in writing before the clock starts.
Request the free audit at techsgenius.org/free-audit/. The audit produces the plan, the plan defines the results, and the 90-day commitment applies from there.
The guarantee reverses marketing's usual risk: the agency bears the timeline, the client keeps the exit.
Risk reversal is a confidence signal enforced by economics, since weak delivery would bleed refunds.
Judge any guarantee by four checks: defined results, written terms, a real window, and free exit.
Everything starts from the free audit, which sets the written target the 90 days are measured against.
Read the terms at https://techsgenius.org/refund-policy/ and start with the free audit at https://techsgenius.org/free-audit/
Kaysar Kobir is the founder of TechsGenius and a digital marketing expert with 8+ years of experience helping businesses grow through SEO, PPC, and AI-powered marketing strategies. He has worked with clients across 30+ countries.