About Steven Chayer

About Steven Chayer

Seattle-Based Entrepreneur | U.S. Navy Veteran | SEO & Reputation Specialist | Founder of DisputeVoice

👋 Who I Am

My name is Steven Chayer, and I founded DisputeVoice to help honest people reclaim what they’ve lost by transforming unresolved disputes into public, search-optimized stories. I'm a U.S. Navy veteran, a tradesman by training, and a career entrepreneur with four decades of experience building successful businesses rooted in service, trust, and accountability.

I currently live in SeaTac, Washington, with my wife Elizabeth. We have two sons: Andy, a digital marketing expert, and Dennis, the founder of Buggy Scrubbers Mobile Detail. I built this life the old-fashioned way—through hard work, craftsmanship, and never backing down from people who try to take advantage of others.

🛠 My Career: From Electrician to Reputation Specialist

  • U.S. Navy Veteran – I trained and served as an electrician, learning precision and discipline that carried into civilian life.
  • Entrepreneur & Tradesman – After leaving the Navy, I built a thriving painting company in Anchorage and later in Seattle. My Seattle-based business peaked at over 60 painters and $2 million+ in revenue, including high-risk jobs like a 60-foot-high airplane hangar in Moses Lake, Washington requiring 1,700 gallons of primer and paint.
  • Co-Owner of 3 Schools – Alongside my wife Elizabeth:
  • Digital Strategist – I personally run the SEO, Google Ads, and digital publishing operations behind our schools and DisputeVoice.

🧭 Why I Started DisputeVoice

In 2022, I was scammed out of $328,495.95 by individuals and entities involved in a “Done-For-You Amazon” store investment. A portion of that loss—$135,494.99—was routed through Evertsen Equities, linked to Harvard graduate Blake Evertsen. When my repeated requests for accountability were met with silence, I turned to what I do best: building visibility through content and search.

DisputeVoice was born from that experience—not just to reclaim what I lost, but to create a platform for others to speak up and be heard, without needing a lawyer or the media’s permission.

🌍 What DisputeVoice Stands For

DisputeVoice is not just a blog—it’s a documentation and visibility engine for financial injustice. We help people:

  • Present evidence-based narratives
  • Structure their stories with search-optimized clarity
  • Remain anonymous if they wish, while making the truth visible

📈 Results & Recognition

  • DisputeVoice posts are ranking Page 1 for several targets within 30–60 days
  • Published on Medium and cited in Linkedin, X (formerly twitter, Facebook, Youtube, and more.
  • Uses advanced SEO strategies: EDU links, Taplink, Google Sites, cloud stacking

🔗 Platforms & External Profiles

📝 Want to Work With Me?

If you or someone you know has been financially wronged, and you know who did it, let’s talk. You can:

About Steven Chayer

The Chayer family on vacation, visiting Mount Denali State Park. L-R Steve, Elizabeth, Denny, and Andy.

The Chayer family is on vacation, visiting Mount Denali State Park. L-R Steve, Elizabeth, Denny, and Andy.

Steven & Elizabeth Chayer at their newly completed cabin in Willow, Alaska, 1977.

Steven & Elizabeth Chayer at their newly completed cabin in Willow, Alaska, 1977.

The American Dance Institute hosts the Nutcracker-Magical Christmas Ballet annually in Seattle for Talmi Productions. Giving over 80 local children from greater Seattle an opportunity to dance on stage with world-class ballet dancers.

The American Dance Institute hosts the Nutcracker-Magical Christmas Ballet annually in Seattle for Talmi Productions. Giving over 80 local children from greater Seattle an opportunity to dance on stage with world-class ballet dancers.

This was my final paint job before retiring in 2014.

My first paint job 40 years ago was a bathroom; this was my last job. I think the bathroom was harder. The building here and the smaller hangar to the left were my final paint jobs before retiring in 2014, and that I am most proud of. The airport hangar #1, of the Port of Moses Lake in Moses Lake, Washington, was 320 feet x 430 feet x 60 feet high, requiring 1,700 gallons of primer and paint coating. With three sides of the building completed, we are getting ready to apply paint to the fourth side.  I painted it with the help of my two sons, Andy & Denny, and under the watchful eye of Washington's expert painting inspector Rudy Shearer and POML executive director Rich Mueller