t2van
Chief Member
Founding Member
Hot Rod
I'll start by saying I've only run adverts internally and never had any luck.
(I'm sure someone will say I didn't give it enough time or hire the right person — which is kind of the point of this post; we'll see.)
Before I get into it — I don't think ads work when selling to the public. As a retailer, I don't think the ROI is there. If I were selling to a business instead, ads probably work, because the ROI is much higher.
I sell mainly to the public, and that's the focus of this thread.
I've always stuck to organic because I could never get ads to work. But as the company's grown, more and more people reach out about ad spend — claiming they can improve my ads (I don't run any, great research) or that they can 10x my client base.
Every so often, especially during quiet months, I cave and start booking calls. I think, "yeah, maybe I need ads."
In every one of these meetings, I get a rough ROI projection — but none of them factor in the cost of paying them. Take your ad spend, your product cost, sell the product, then pay a % to the person or agency running it — where's the profit? Not in my opinion.
People point to my customer lifetime value (LTV) and retention as reasons I could spend more to acquire a customer. Sure — but if I spend £500 to get a customer who only spends £50 a year, it takes 10 years to see a return. That's not growth, that's bleeding money to acquire a client.
In a slide deck, the maths looks great and gets you excited. In reality, it falls short.
Ads are the shortcut
Personally, ads are the shortcut. The easy way out. People want to spend money because it feels like a shortcut. If ads really worked that way, I'd be all over them. I'm not. They don't. It's the internet's snake oil.
Years ago in print advertising, I was told you needed a minimum 6-month magazine booking before seeing any ROI, because:
Month 1: Your advert gets ignored
Month 2: They see your advert
Month 3: They start to remember you
Month 4+: They start to trust you, because they remember you
That's print. Why would digital be any different? It isn't.
Ads = instant impressions. In my opinion, advertising is a battle of impressions. When you're starting out or trying to grow, impressions come from two places:
Do you think customers buy more readily from someone who paid to reach them, or someone who took the time to understand them before they ever bought anything?
Ads will always play a part — they're a tool, and like any tool, there's a time and place for them.
Say you're a new business with £10,000 to spend. You hire an agency, run ads, and get 50,000+ impressions. How many of those actually buy from you? I'd bet your first ad spend runs at a loss.
What does your agency tell you then? Spend more, give it time, increase the budget, keep going until we dial it in. Fine for them — that's your money, and they get paid regardless. Meanwhile you're doing exactly what every competitor is doing: burning money on ads, hoping for a sale.
In my experience, most agencies say you'll break even or see ROI after 2–3 months. Great — except now I'm £30k in the hole, assuming I even have more money left to spend. If not, I'm stuck. Didn't work? Business gone, or I'm putting it on a credit card and landing myself in a world of hurt.
Now take that same business and invest those 3 months (time, not money) into creating content and building the site organically. After 3 months, I've built content that holds its value and keeps paying off. I've still got my £10k in the bank, and I've got something that works for the cost of time instead of money.
I've generated 50k+ impressions the same way — except I've built trust with my audience before spending a penny. That customer is far more likely to buy from me than one who saw an ad on a semi-relevant keyword. It cost me time, not cash.
I get it, time is hard to find. But there's no shortcut. People avoid creating content because they're not confident at it, don't understand it, or don't know how to market themselves. Yet those same people will spend money on ads expecting a different result.
But what about the YouTubers who show ads working — selling socks on Etsy and making it look easy? Sure, maybe it does work for some. But all they usually show you is turnover. They rarely share what they actually spent on ads, what the product cost them, or what the real margin was.
That's part of my issue with ads for public-facing sellers. It's often pushed as default advice for new business owners, and I think that advice is bad.
B2B might be a different story. If you're billing for your time or expertise, the ROI is tied directly to the value of your time — you're essentially selling yourself. That's different from selling a product like a TV, a memory card, or socks. But even then, it still comes down to time vs. money.
I'm not writing this to trash anyone's services, jobs, or agencies — just sharing my opinion on why I think ads don't work, from this thread https://officeoutlaw.com/threads/worst-business-advice-you-ever-got.4325/#post-51200.
What do you think? Am I wrong? Am I off the mark? Is it just because I've never run ads myself? Interested to hear your thoughts, good and bad.
(I'm sure someone will say I didn't give it enough time or hire the right person — which is kind of the point of this post; we'll see.)
Before I get into it — I don't think ads work when selling to the public. As a retailer, I don't think the ROI is there. If I were selling to a business instead, ads probably work, because the ROI is much higher.
I sell mainly to the public, and that's the focus of this thread.
I've always stuck to organic because I could never get ads to work. But as the company's grown, more and more people reach out about ad spend — claiming they can improve my ads (I don't run any, great research) or that they can 10x my client base.
Every so often, especially during quiet months, I cave and start booking calls. I think, "yeah, maybe I need ads."
In every one of these meetings, I get a rough ROI projection — but none of them factor in the cost of paying them. Take your ad spend, your product cost, sell the product, then pay a % to the person or agency running it — where's the profit? Not in my opinion.
People point to my customer lifetime value (LTV) and retention as reasons I could spend more to acquire a customer. Sure — but if I spend £500 to get a customer who only spends £50 a year, it takes 10 years to see a return. That's not growth, that's bleeding money to acquire a client.
In a slide deck, the maths looks great and gets you excited. In reality, it falls short.
Ads are the shortcut
Personally, ads are the shortcut. The easy way out. People want to spend money because it feels like a shortcut. If ads really worked that way, I'd be all over them. I'm not. They don't. It's the internet's snake oil.
Years ago in print advertising, I was told you needed a minimum 6-month magazine booking before seeing any ROI, because:
Month 1: Your advert gets ignored
Month 2: They see your advert
Month 3: They start to remember you
Month 4+: They start to trust you, because they remember you
That's print. Why would digital be any different? It isn't.
Ads = instant impressions. In my opinion, advertising is a battle of impressions. When you're starting out or trying to grow, impressions come from two places:
- Ads (money)
- Organic (time)
Do you think customers buy more readily from someone who paid to reach them, or someone who took the time to understand them before they ever bought anything?
Ads will always play a part — they're a tool, and like any tool, there's a time and place for them.
Say you're a new business with £10,000 to spend. You hire an agency, run ads, and get 50,000+ impressions. How many of those actually buy from you? I'd bet your first ad spend runs at a loss.
What does your agency tell you then? Spend more, give it time, increase the budget, keep going until we dial it in. Fine for them — that's your money, and they get paid regardless. Meanwhile you're doing exactly what every competitor is doing: burning money on ads, hoping for a sale.
In my experience, most agencies say you'll break even or see ROI after 2–3 months. Great — except now I'm £30k in the hole, assuming I even have more money left to spend. If not, I'm stuck. Didn't work? Business gone, or I'm putting it on a credit card and landing myself in a world of hurt.
Now take that same business and invest those 3 months (time, not money) into creating content and building the site organically. After 3 months, I've built content that holds its value and keeps paying off. I've still got my £10k in the bank, and I've got something that works for the cost of time instead of money.
I've generated 50k+ impressions the same way — except I've built trust with my audience before spending a penny. That customer is far more likely to buy from me than one who saw an ad on a semi-relevant keyword. It cost me time, not cash.
I get it, time is hard to find. But there's no shortcut. People avoid creating content because they're not confident at it, don't understand it, or don't know how to market themselves. Yet those same people will spend money on ads expecting a different result.
But what about the YouTubers who show ads working — selling socks on Etsy and making it look easy? Sure, maybe it does work for some. But all they usually show you is turnover. They rarely share what they actually spent on ads, what the product cost them, or what the real margin was.
That's part of my issue with ads for public-facing sellers. It's often pushed as default advice for new business owners, and I think that advice is bad.
B2B might be a different story. If you're billing for your time or expertise, the ROI is tied directly to the value of your time — you're essentially selling yourself. That's different from selling a product like a TV, a memory card, or socks. But even then, it still comes down to time vs. money.
I'm not writing this to trash anyone's services, jobs, or agencies — just sharing my opinion on why I think ads don't work, from this thread https://officeoutlaw.com/threads/worst-business-advice-you-ever-got.4325/#post-51200.
What do you think? Am I wrong? Am I off the mark? Is it just because I've never run ads myself? Interested to hear your thoughts, good and bad.