I run a marketing agency. This piece is about the industry I'm part of, and I'm writing it because I think most founders evaluating an agency don't actually know what questions separate a real partner from a billing relationship dressed up as one.
This isn't a takedown of every agency in India. There are excellent ones — agencies run by people who genuinely treat client outcomes as their own success metric. But the structural incentives in this industry make it easy for mediocre agencies to survive for years without ever being held accountable for results, simply because most clients don't know what to look for. That's the actual problem worth naming.
1. The Incentive Problem Nobody Names
Most marketing agencies in India are paid a fixed monthly retainer regardless of outcome. This isn't inherently wrong — it provides stability that lets agencies plan resourcing. But it creates a structural incentive misalignment that clients rarely think through: the agency gets paid the same amount whether your revenue grows 40% or stays flat, as long as they keep showing up and producing deliverables.
When the financial outcome doesn't depend on the business outcome, the rational behaviour for an agency under cost pressure is to optimise for client retention through the appearance of activity, not necessarily for the harder, slower work of actually moving the needle on revenue. This isn't a moral failing of individual people working at these agencies — it's what the incentive structure predictably produces over time, at scale, across an industry.
2. Pattern 1 — Billing for Hours, Not Outcomes
Agencies that report on activity volume — number of posts, number of ad variations, number of blogs published — are reporting on effort, not impact. Activity is easy to produce and easy to report. It's also nearly meaningless if it isn't tied to a business outcome.
The test is simple: if you removed every mention of activity volume from your monthly report, would there still be a clear story about what changed for your business? If the report would be empty without "we posted 20 times" or "we ran 8 ad sets," the agency is reporting on what's easy to measure, not what actually matters.
3. Pattern 2 — Vanity Metrics in Every Report
Impressions and reach are inputs, not outcomes. A campaign can have excellent reach and terrible business results. Agencies that lead every report with reach and engagement, and only mention revenue or lead numbers in passing (or not at all), are managing the narrative rather than the business.
This pattern is especially common with agencies managing social media or brand awareness work, where business-outcome metrics are genuinely harder to attribute directly. But "harder to measure" isn't a reason to stop measuring it — it's a reason to invest more in the attribution work, not less.
4. Pattern 3 — Your Account Is Run by Someone With 6 Months of Experience
This is one of the most common and most damaging patterns in the agency industry globally, not just in India. The founder or senior strategist who impresses you in the sales pitch is rarely the person who manages your account day-to-day. That work is frequently handed to a junior team member, sometimes within their first year of professional experience, with limited oversight.
This isn't always wrong — junior team members can do excellent work with proper mentorship and review. The problem is when there's no senior oversight at all, and the client has no visibility into who's actually making strategic decisions on their account or how much experience that person has.
5. Pattern 4 — Strategy Is Just "Best Practices"
If an agency's explanation for any strategic decision is a generic rule ("we always run retargeting at 30% of budget," "best practice is to post 5 times a week") rather than a reason specific to your business, your customer, and your data — they're applying a template, not strategising.
6. Pattern 5 — Churn Is the Business Model
Some agencies are structurally built around constant new client acquisition rather than long-term retention. Their sales process is excellent. Their account management, six months in, noticeably declines in attention and quality. This isn't accidental — it reflects where the business invests its resources: heavily in sales, lightly in delivery.
The signal to watch for: does the energy and attention you received in your first month feel different from the energy and attention you're receiving now? If quality and responsiveness visibly decline after the initial sales push, you're likely dealing with an agency optimised for acquisition over retention.
"None of these patterns require a bad person to exist. They require an incentive structure that rewards the appearance of work over the substance of results — and an industry where most clients don't know what to ask to tell the difference."— Saksham Mehra, Founder & CEO, ENZO Digital
7. How to Evaluate Your Own Agency — A Checklist
If more than two or three of these are unchecked, it's worth a direct conversation with your agency — or a genuine evaluation of alternatives. Not out of disloyalty, but because the relationship should be earning its cost, and you deserve clarity on whether it is.
8. What ENZO Does Differently
I won't pretend we're immune to every pressure in this industry — we're a business too, and we have to manage growth, margin, and team capacity like anyone else. But the specific commitments we hold ourselves to: every client report leads with business-outcome metrics, not vanity numbers. Every client knows exactly who's working on their account and can reach that person directly. Every strategic decision is explained in terms specific to that client's business, documented in our SOPs, not generic industry language. And when something underperforms, we say so before the client has to ask.
You can read more about how we operate internally — including the system we built to enforce this kind of accountability — if you want the full picture, not just the claim.
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