Most wasted ad budgets do not look wasted. They look like busy dashboards, weekly reports and an agency that always has an explanation. Here are the seven signs we see most often when auditing accounts, and what each one costs you.
1. Reporting in reach, not revenue
If the monthly report leads with impressions and engagement, the agency is reporting effort. Demand cost per lead, cost per order and return on spend as the first slide, not the last.
2. You do not own your ad accounts
The single most expensive red flag. If the agency runs ads from accounts it owns, your data, pixel history and audiences leave when you do. Everything should run on assets you control from day one.
3. No creative testing system
Auctions in 2026 are won by creative volume and iteration. One ad per campaign refreshed quarterly is not a strategy; it is a subscription. Ask how many variants ship monthly and what the kill criteria are.
4. Set-and-forget budgets
Spend that never moves between campaigns means nobody is managing it. Budget should follow performance weekly.
5. The senior team vanished after the pitch
Ask who actually touches the account. Question one of our ten exists because this bait-and-switch is the industry standard.
6. Landing pages nobody mentions
Traffic is half the job. If your agency never talks about where the clicks land, they are optimising the cheap half. This CRO rebuild lifted conversion 88% with zero extra spend, which is what the other half looks like.
7. Confusing ad spend with fees
An honest proposal separates what goes to Meta and Google from what goes to the agency, always. Our honest pricing guide covers how this should be structured.
The fix
None of these require firing anyone on the spot; they require a direct conversation and a thirty-day correction window. If the answers do not change, the account should. Our performance marketing practice is built on the opposite of every flag above, and we are comfortable being audited against this list.
