- Searching for the "best" agency is a mistake. You need the "right" agency for your specific business, niche, and stage of growth. A local Cardiff agency might be great, but proven expertise in your sector trumps a local postcode every time.
- Evidence is everything. Ignore flashy pitches and focus on detailed case studies. Do they have experience with businesses like yours? Can they show you the strategy, the numbers, and the results in pounds (£), not just vague promises?
- The initial "free consultation" is your most powerful vetting tool. If they don't give you at least one genuinely useful, specific idea for your business right there on the call, they're probably not the one. They should be diagnosing, not just selling.
- Don't be afraid to ask hard questions. Dig into their process for testing, their communication style, and who will actually be working on your account. Vague answers are a massive red flag.
- This guide includes an interactive Agency Vetting Scorecard to help you objectively compare potential partners and a calculator to understand what you can actually afford to pay for a customer.
Searching for the 'best paid ad agency in Cardiff' is a bit like searching for the 'best food'. It completely depends on what you're after. A Michelin-starred restaurant is useless if all you want is a decent curry. The same goes for ad agencies. The massive, full-service agency down in Cardiff Bay with a huge client roster might be completely the wrong fit for a tech startup in Tramshed Tech needing to scale quickly and agily.
The question isn't "who is the best?". The real question, the one that will actually make you money, is "who is the right partner to solve my specific, urgent business problem?". Forget the awards, the fancy offices, and the slick sales pitches. Your job is to find a team that understands your customer's nightmare and has a proven track record of solving it. Let's be honest, you're not buying ads; you're buying results. And finding the right partner is the most important part of that equation.
So, how do you find the 'right' agency in Cardiff (or anywhere else)?
Before you even type "PPC Cardiff" into Google, you need to do some work internally. Most businesses I talk to skip this step, and it's why they end up burning cash with the wrong agency. You need to get brutally honest about the one single problem you're trying to solve. This isn't about vague goals like 'increase brand awareness' or 'get more leads'. It needs to be specific and painful.
Your problem isn't 'we need more leads'. It's 'our sales team are wasting half their day on unqualified demos with tyre-kickers, and it's costing us £10k a month in salaries'. It's not 'we need to sell more ecommerce products'. It's 'our AOV is stuck at £45, and with rising supplier costs, our margins are getting crushed. We need to acquire customers who buy our higher-ticket items'.
Once you've defined that nightmare, your entire vetting process changes. You're no longer looking for a generalist; you're looking for a specialist who has seen and solved your exact flavour of problem before. This clarity is your shield against impressive-sounding agencies that can't actually deliver for you.
I remember one client, a B2B SaaS company based just outside Cardiff, who came to us after spending a fortune with a big agency. The agency had got them thousands of "leads," but none of them were converting. The problem? The agency was targeting anyone with a pulse who had "marketing" in their job title. We focused their entire strategy on a single nightmare: CMOs at fast-growth companies who were terrified of their board asking about marketing ROI. The lead volume dropped, but the quality shot through the roof. They closed more deals in three months than they had in the previous year. That's the power of focusing on the problem.
Forget the sales pitch, demand the evidence
Once you know your problem, you can start looking at agencies. The first thing to look for is proof. Any agency can talk a good game, but only a good one can show you the results. This means diving deep into their case studies.
Don't just skim the headlines. Look for these things:
-> Niche Relevence: Have they worked with businesses like yours? Not just in the same broad industry (e.g., 'eCommerce'), but with similar business models, price points, and target customers. If you're selling a £2,000 course, a case study about selling £20 t-shirts isn't that relevant, is it?
-> Real Numbers: Look for specific metrics. What was the starting CPA (Cost Per Acquisition)? What did they get it down to? What was the ROAS (Return On Ad Spend)? How much revenue did they generate in pounds (£)? If the numbers are vague or just show vanity metrics like 'impressions', be suspicious.
-> The 'How': A good case study doesn't just show the results; it gives you a glimpse into the strategy. What platforms did they use? What was their thinking behind the targeting? What kind of creative worked? This shows they have a repeatable process, not just that they got lucky once.
We've worked with a few B2B firms in Wales and our approach for LinkedIn Ads in Cardiff always starts with dissecting their Ideal Customer Profile before a single penny is spent. For instance, working with an environmental controls company, we reduced their cost per lead by 84%. This was achieved by moving away from broad targeting on platforms like LinkedIn and instead focusing narrowly on specific job titles like 'Facilities Manager' and 'Head of Estates' within their target industries. That's the level of strategic detail you should be looking for.
This flowchart outlines the simple but effective process you should follow. Sticking to this process saves you from getting sidetracked by a convincing salesperson.
Clearly identify your single most urgent, expensive business problem.
Find agencies with relevant case studies that prove they've solved this problem before.
Book a consultation. Test their expertise. Do they give you real, actionable advice?
Use a scorecard to compare them objectively. Choose a partner, not just a supplier.
What is a good agency actually worth?
This is where most founders get it wrong. They shop on price. They get three quotes and pick the cheapest one. This is almost always a catastrophic mistake. A cheap agency that gets you zero results is infinitely more expensive than a pricier specialist that delivers a 5x return. The cost of the agency is irrelevant; the return on investment is all that matters.
Tbh, understanding what you can afford to spend to get a customer is probably the most valuable calculation you can do. It's called the LTV to CAC ratio. Lifetime Value (LTV) is the total profit you'll make from an average customer. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) is what you spend to get them. A healthy business should have an LTV:CAC ratio of at least 3:1.
Let's run the numbers for a hypothetical Cardiff-based SaaS company:
- Average Revenue Per Account (ARPA): £300/month
- Gross Margin: 80%
- Monthly Churn Rate: 5% (meaning you lose 5% of your customers each month)
LTV = (ARPA * Gross Margin %) / Monthly Churn Rate
LTV = (£300 * 0.80) / 0.05 = £240 / 0.05 = £4,800
So, each customer is worth £4,800 in gross margin. At a 3:1 ratio, you can afford to spend up to £1,600 to acquire a single customer. If your sales team closes 1 in 5 qualified leads, you can pay up to £320 for a single lead. Suddenly that £150 CPL from LinkedIn doesn't seem so bad, does it?
Knowing this number transforms your conversations with agencies. You're no longer asking "how cheap can you get me leads?". You're asking "can you get me qualified leads for under £320?". It's a completely different, and much more productive, conversation. Many founders don't have a clear idea of these costs, which is why we've put together a comprehensive guide on Facebook Ads management costs in the UK.
Use the calculator below to get a rough idea of your own LTV. It might just change your entire perspective on your marketing budget.
A healthy business can afford a Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) of up to £1,600 (LTV / 3).
The consultation call: Your ultimate vetting tool
You've done your research, you've looked at their case studies, and you've shortlisted a few agencies. Now comes the most important part: the initial consultation call. This is where you separate the experts from the salespeople. A good agency will use this call to give you value, not just to sell you a package.
Here's what you should be looking for:
- They ask smart questions. They should be trying to understand your business, your customers, your numbers, and your 'nightmare problem'. They should be digging deeper than the surface-level stuff.
- They give you at least one specific, actionable idea. Tbh this is the big one. By the end of the call, you should have a new idea you could go and implement yourself. Maybe it's a new audience to target, a suggestion for your landing page, or a different ad creative angle. If they hold all their cards close to their chest and just say "we'll fix it all once you sign up", that's a red flag.
- They are honest and manage expectations. Paid advertising isn't magic. A good agency will be realistic. They won't promise you a 10x ROAS overnight. They'll talk about testing, learning, and optimising over time. Anyone who promises you guaranteed results is either lying or inexperienced.
- You speak to an expert. You should be talking to someone who actually knows how to run ad campaigns, not a junior sales rep who's just reading from a script. You should feel like you're talking to a potential partner who genuinely understands your challenges.
We offer a free account review for exactly this reason. It lets potential clients see how we think and gives them a taste of the expertise they'd be getting. It's a no-pressure way to see if we're a good fit. Any decent PPC consultant in Cardiff should be willing to do the same. If an agency tries to charge you for this initial strategy session, I'd probably walk away.
To help you keep track and compare agencies objectively, I've built a little interactive scorecard. Use it during or after your calls to rate each agency you speak to. It helps remove the emotion and focus on what actually matters.
1. Proven Experience (Weight: 40%)
2. Consultation Call Quality (Weight: 35%)
3. Process & Transparency (Weight: 25%)
Agency Fit Score
68%This could be a decent option, but make sure to clarify any areas of weakness.
The final decision is about partnership
At the end of the day, you're not just hiring a supplier to press some buttons in an ad account. You're hiring a strategic partner to help grow your business. The right agency will feel like an extension of your own team. They'll be proactive, they'll challenge your assumptions, and they'll be just as obsessed with your business goals as you are. Choosing between a DIY approach and hiring an agency is a big step, but finding the right partner makes all the difference.
Whether that agency is based in Cardiff, Swansea, or London doesn't really matter as much as their expertise. A local team can be great for face-to-face meetings, but in 2024, a Zoom call with a specialist who truly gets your niche is far more valuable than a coffee with a generalist who happens to be down the road.
This whole process might seem like a lot of work, and it is. But the cost of getting it wrong—wasted ad spend, missed opportunities, and months of stagnation—is far greater. Taking the time to properly vet your options using a framework like this is the best investment you can make in your company's growth.
If you're a founder in Cardiff or anywhere in the UK and you're struggling to get results from your paid ads, this is the kind of deep thinking required. It's not about finding quick hacks; it's about building a solid, evidence-based strategy. Finding the right partner is the first, and most important, step.
If you'd like an expert, no-nonsense opinion on your current ad strategy and want to see how we'd approach solving your specific business problem, feel free to book a free, 20-minute strategy session with us. We'll give you honest feedback and some actionable advice you can use, whether you decide to work with us or not.
Hope this helps!