One of the hardest lessons in PPC has nothing to do with bidding strategies, keywords, or campaign structure. It’s knowing when to walk away from a client.
On a recent episode of PPC Live The Podcast, performance marketing strategist Laura Abreu shared how taking on the wrong client early in her career became one of her most valuable professional lessons.
When your gut is telling you something
Laura’s first client was launching an ecommerce store selling beauty products from well-known brands. On the surface, it seemed like a great opportunity, but something felt off.
The products were available elsewhere at the same price, giving customers little reason to buy from an unknown retailer. Despite her concerns, Laura ignored her instincts and accepted the project anyway.
Great marketing can’t fix a weak business model
The team tried everything. Search campaigns, Meta ads, seasonal offers, product bundles, PR activity, and customer testimonials.
After three months of testing and optimisation, they hadn’t generated a single sale. The issue wasn’t the marketing. The business simply hadn’t established a compelling reason for customers to choose them over established competitors.
The importance of market validation
Many business owners believe hiring a marketer will automatically create growth. In reality, marketing amplifies demand—it doesn’t create it.
Today, Laura asks prospective clients whether they’ve tested the market, generated sales, and gathered customer feedback before investing in advertising. If the foundations aren’t there, paid media won’t solve the problem.
Pretty creative doesn’t equal performance
One of the biggest mistakes marketers make is judging creative based on personal preference rather than data.
The team invested heavily in creating beautiful visuals, but attractive creative alone wasn’t enough to drive sales. Customers don’t buy because an ad looks good; they buy because the offer resonates with their needs.
The emotional cost of a bad client
The failed project affected Laura far beyond the campaign results. As many marketers do, she tied her self-worth to the outcome.
The experience damaged her confidence so much that she stopped taking PPC clients for a period of time. Looking back, she realised she was carrying responsibility for a business problem that advertising could never have fixed.
Why expectations matter
One lesson Laura now applies with every client is setting expectations early and clearly.
Rather than promising immediate growth, she positions advertising as a way to test assumptions, validate demand, and uncover opportunities. This creates more honest conversations and avoids unrealistic expectations from the outset.
Why Laura doesn’t work with friends or family
Perhaps the strongest lesson from the experience is a rule she follows to this day: she doesn’t work with friends or family.
Maintaining professional distance allows her to stay objective, make decisions based on data, and avoid the emotional complications that can arise when personal relationships and business become intertwined.
Reputation is more valuable than revenue
When campaigns don’t go as planned, Laura believes honesty is non-negotiable.
Whether that means admitting mistakes, offering additional support, or refunding fees where appropriate, protecting your reputation is more important than protecting your ego. In an industry built on referrals, trust is everything.
Common mistakes Laura sees in PPC accounts
Having audited accounts across multiple markets, Laura says one of the biggest mistakes marketers make is treating campaigns as “set and forget” assets. She often finds underperforming creatives left running for months, ad copy that hasn’t been refreshed, and winning ads that aren’t being scaled effectively.
She also sees businesses creating unnecessary friction in lead generation campaigns. Long-form copy, overly complex forms, and sending users to external landing pages instead of testing native lead forms can all reduce conversion rates. In her experience, simpler journeys often deliver better results.
How Laura thinks marketers should use AI
Laura sees AI as a powerful tool for automating repetitive tasks rather than replacing marketers. She recommends using it to monitor performance, automate alerts, and streamline workflows so practitioners can spend more time on strategy and client communication.
At the same time, she warns against relying blindly on AI-generated outputs. Poor-quality ad descriptions and generic messaging can hurt performance, so human oversight remains essential. The marketers who succeed will be those who combine AI efficiency with strong strategic thinking.
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