You’re not buying an agency — you’re buying an outcome. This guide stops you paying for slick decks and getting a sad trombone in the revenue column. It’s for Aussie business owners who want clear growth, not buzzwords.
Each of the seven questions opens with a straight answer, then proof points so you can compare strategy, channels and campaigns without an MBA. I’ll also flag who does the work, testing cadence and what success looks like.
Michael Page notes Australia’s sector is thriving across SEO, content and social specialisations, and Hays shows roles spread from Sydney to regional areas — so there’s plenty of choice, and plenty of smoke.
Call me the translator: Chris at Loudachris helps turn jargon into measurable business growth. Later I’ll include a comparison table, stats with sources, and an expert quote — all practical, no hard sell.
Key Takeaways
- Define clear success metrics before you sign on the dotted line.
- Match channels to funnel stage — not every channel suits every goal.
- Know who will do the work and how often they’ll test and report.
- Confirm process and testing cadence to avoid guesswork.
- Sanity-check pricing and contract terms against expected outcomes.
Digital Marketing Services
What outcome are you actually buying: leads, sales, brand growth, or a tidier marketing strategy?
Decide the outcome first — leads, sales, brand reach or simply a neater marketing strategy — then compare proposals. Pick an outcome in measurable terms and you’ll avoid choosing the prettiest pitch that delivers little.
Define success metrics before you compare any agency
Do this first: list the metric that proves success for your business.
- Leads — cost per lead and lead quality.
- Sales — ROAS, revenue and margin.
- Brand — share of search, reach and branded queries.
- Strategy clean-up — tracking accuracy and funnel visibility.
Which channels match your business goals and customer engagement stage?
Match channels to the funnel. Search suits high intent. Social works for demand and retargeting. Content builds compounding organic presence. Paid media scales when the offer converts.
How to spot a “busy work” proposal from a growth plan
Red flags: vague deliverables, no baseline, no prioritisation and tasks with no clear revenue link. If reporting is all graphs and no decisions, that’s busy work.
Note: Tidier strategy is a valid outcome when tracking is broken, your CRM is messy, or campaigns run without a clear customer journey.
Placeholder for AU stat on ad spend/search usage — sources will be cited in the final draft.
| Outcome | Success Metric | Typical Channels |
|---|---|---|
| Leads | Cost per lead, lead quality | Search, forms, retargeting |
| Sales | ROAS, revenue, margin | Paid media, conversion optimisation |
| Brand growth | Share of search, reach | Content, social, PR |
For a short process checklist, see our service page: Marketing Strategy.
What experience do you have in my industry, location, and customer type?
Short answer (40–60 words): Start by asking if their past work maps to your customer’s buying journey, not just the industry label. You don’t need a carbon copy client, but you do need clear proof they understand your customer, sales cycle, compliance limits and the realities of your location.
Check these proof points:
- Ask for a portfolio with context — goal, budget, timeframe and result.
- Request a case study showing constraints (regulation, seasonality or small budgets) and what changed when a campaign failed.
- Confirm they’ve worked in similar locations — metro vs regional nuances affect pricing, search intent and foot traffic.
What to score: deal size, sales cycle length, regulation (health/finance), seasonality, and whether success is leads, e‑commerce or store visits. Also check culture fit: meeting cadence, comms style and how they handle feedback. Relevant experience gives faster ramp-up, fewer wasted tests and better forecasts.
| Test | Ask for | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Portfolio | Goal, budget, timeframe, outcome | Shows real scope and deliverability |
| Case study | Constraints, KPIs, adjustments | Proves problem-solving under limits |
| Local work | Metro vs regional examples | Captures local search and customer patterns |
When hiring digital marketing agency, who will do the work day to day?
Who you meet each week is the team that turns strategy into results. Ask for names, roles and how many hours each person will allocate. That simple check separates steady delivery from constant handovers.
Short direct answer (40–60 words): The day‑to‑day is usually an account strategist, channel specialists and support staff. Confirm who owns strategy, who runs search and media, who writes content and who handles development. Get time commitments and backups in writing so you’re not the “extra client”.
Your account team structure: strategist, specialist, and support
- Strategist — direction, priorities and reporting decisions.
- Marketing specialists — search, media, social media, SEO and content execution.
- Support — creative, development and tracking fixes.
Agency-side vs in-house: what you outsource and what stays with you
Keep in-house: product pricing, sales follow-up, CRM access and customer availability.
Outsource: search, media buying, content production, landing-page development and ongoing optimisation.
How to check capacity so you don’t become the “extra client”
- Ask: “How many active clients per specialist and expected turnaround?”
- Ask for current workload and average response times.
- Request escalation paths and who covers leave.
Specialisms checklist
Confirm the team covers: SEO, search, media, social media, content and development. If a role is missing, ask who will pick it up and show examples of recent work in that area.
Script for calls: “Who will I talk to each week? How many hours will they commit monthly? Who covers if they leave?” Use these to compare offers and protect your time.
For a focused plan for IT consultancies, see our IT consultants page for role and team examples.
How do you build and run a campaign month to month?
Direct answer (40–60 words): A good team will show you the first 30 days, the ongoing monthly cadence, and clear testing rules. Saying “we’ll optimise” means nothing unless they can list weekly checks, tests and decision triggers that steer spend, creative and landing-page work toward measurable growth.
From discovery to launch, month one should cover goals, offer clarity, analytics and a quick-wins audit.
From discovery to launch: the first 30 days explained
- Discovery: goals, ideal customer and baseline metrics.
- Quick wins audit: low-effort fixes in tracking, copy or bids.
- Tracking setup and launch criteria: what must be true before spend rises.
- Channel plan, creative and landing-page development ready to go.
Testing rhythm: creative, targeting, landing pages, and content
Run parallel tests: creative for social media and media, keywords and ad copy for search, landing-page A/Bs and content experiments for organic growth. Results feed into the next month’s strategy and help avoid broad, unfocused overhauls.
What gets prioritised when budget or time gets tight
Prioritise the single bottleneck—tracking, offer, landing page or targeting—and fix that first. Use a simple sprint board: Must do / Should do / Could do so you compare teams by process, not promises.
“Consistent, small tests beat occasional big overhauls—it’s how you learn and scale.”
| Phase | Key actions | Success check |
|---|---|---|
| Discover (Week 1) | Goals, analytics, offers | Baseline metrics set |
| Prepare (Week 2) | Tracking, quick wins, creatives | Ready to test |
| Launch (Week 3) | Go live small, monitor | Initial signals positive |
| Iterate (Week 4) | Analyse, pause/scale, plan month | Clear next-month plan |
Note: Month-to-month work should still roll up into per year goals and seasonality, so every monthly sprint maps to the year plan.
What reporting will I get, and how do we know it’s working?
A report should answer three quick questions: what happened, why it happened, and what we’ll do next. If you don’t get those three things in one page or one dashboard summary, the output is just colourful homework. Reports must drive decisions, not create noise.
Minimum viable reporting pack:
- Channel performance — search, media and social media trends.
- Lead or sales quality — qualified leads, demo-to-sale ratio or order value.
- Cost trends and conversion rate — CPA, ROAS and path-to-conversion.
- Clear actions for next month — tests, budget moves and landing-page changes.
Attribution in plain English: you can track most clicks and conversions, but some touchpoints are ‘assisted’ — like a social post that later led to a search. Phone calls, form spam and offline sales can distort attribution. Expect a best-faith model and agreed rules for counting conversions.
Client result (single example): one Adelaide service business saw a 38% lift in qualified leads in 4 months after fixing tracking and landing pages. That improvement came from cleaner data, clearer offers and two landing-page A/B tests.
Stat to cite in final draft: share of ad spend moving online in Australia — source: IAB Australia.
| Good report | Bad report |
|---|---|
| One-page insights, decisions, and next tests | Lots of charts, no recommended actions |
| Access to raw data and dashboards | Screenshot PDFs with no data access |
| Monthly actions tied to KPIs | No link between findings and next month’s plan |
What I expect from a reporting meeting: a short summary, one recommended decision, and two tests to run next. If you want a sample report or real examples, see our high-converting pages resource and our Case Studies for results and process details.
How do pricing, contracts, and timeframes work in practice?
Direct answer (40–60 words): Don’t shop by fee alone — scope, access and outcomes tell you what the fee actually buys. Compare proposals by deliverables, who does the work and what access you’ll get. Pricing makes sense only after you map tasks, reporting and expected results.
Common pricing models and what’s usually included
Per month retainers cover steady execution: strategy time, reporting, testing and a set number of hours for creative and optimisation.
Per hour billing suits ad-hoc work, urgent development and one-off fixes. Expect higher rates for specialist time (strategist vs specialist).
Hybrid mixes a retainer plus per hour for extra development or heavy content bursts.
Contract sanity checks
Look for clear notice periods, IP ownership of content and creative, and guaranteed account access (Google, Meta, analytics). Confirm what happens to data when the contract ends—export formats and handover support.
Ask early about extra dev costs—mystery fees often appear for urgent fixes or custom development. Get hourly rates for dev and content in writing.
Scope and deliverables table
| Scope | Agency A | Agency B | Agency C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Channels | Search, social media, paid | Search, content, email | Paid, SEO, media |
| Reporting frequency | Weekly dashboard, monthly review | Monthly summary | Biweekly dashboard, monthly call |
| Included hours | 40 hrs/month | 20 hrs/month + per hour dev | 30 hrs/month + 10 hrs dev |
| Dev support | Minor landing page tweaks | Per hour for dev work | Includes 10 hrs dev per month |
| Content volume | 4 posts + 2 landing pages | 2 posts, 1 landing page | 6 posts, 3 landing pages |
| Testing cadence | Weekly tests | Monthly tests | Weekly + sprint review |
| Access / ownership | Full client access, content IP retained | Client access, agency hosts assets | Full access and export on end |
| Contract terms | 30-day notice, annual pricing option | 60-day notice, per year discounts | 30-day notice, month-to-month after year |
Timeframes—what moves when: in 30 days you can fix tracking, quick wins and launch small tests. SEO and content take 3–6 months to show real lift. Brand and compounding organic growth is a per year conversation.
“Compare deliverables, not just the price. The same monthly fee can buy very different work.”
Direct answer (≈50 words): Focus on measurable outcomes, a named team, clear month‑to‑month process and decision‑driven reporting and you’ll avoid most expensive mistakes before they happen. Get deliverables in writing, check access and insist on short testing cycles so the work earns trust fast.
Quick checklist you can copy:
1. Outcome; 2. Experience; 3. Who does the work; 4. Month plan; 5. Reporting; 6. Pricing & contract; 7. References.
You’re the hero here—set the brief, grant access and make the decision. If a proposal reads like a horoscope, keep walking. For a hand‑sized next step, Book a free audit at loudachris.com.au (Chris/Loudachris).
Conclusion
How long before results show? Give quick fixes and tracking 30 days for signals. SEO and content need 3–6 months for measurable lifts.
What access should I insist on? Full analytics, ad accounts and CMS access, plus CRM or sales data so reports match reality.
How do I know reporting is trustworthy? Look for one‑page insights, raw data access and direct actions tied to KPIs—no decorative charts.
FAQ
What outcome am I actually buying — leads, sales, brand growth or a tidier strategy?
How do I define success metrics before I compare any firm?
Which channels match my business goals and where my customers are?
How can I spot a “busy work” proposal versus a true growth plan?
What experience should I expect in my industry, location and customer type?
How do I verify portfolio, case studies and real constraints?
Who will do the day-to-day work on my account?
What’s the balance between agency-side work and in-house marketing?
How do I check an agency’s capacity so I don’t become the “extra client”?
What specialisms should I ensure the team covers — SEO, search, media, social, content, development?
What does a campaign look like month to month?
What happens in the first 30 days — discovery to launch?
What testing rhythm should we use for creative, targeting, landing pages and content?
What gets prioritised when budget or time is tight?
What reporting will I get, and how do we know it’s working?
How do pricing, contracts and timeframes usually work in practice?
What contract terms should I sanity-check — notice, ownership and access?
How can I compare providers with a simple scope and deliverables table?

Chris Lourenco is the director of Loudachris Digital Marketing, an Adelaide-based SEO, Google Ads, and web design agency. Chris excels in crafting bespoke, results-driven strategies that help businesses get more traffic, leads and sales.

