Choosing a PPC Agency in Cyprus: 9 Questions That Actually Matter
Most agency
vetting is theatre. You ask the questions. They give rehearsed answers. You
sign anyway.
Hiring a PPC
agency in Cyprus is a high-trust, high-cost decision. The questions most buyers
ask don’t surface what actually matters. Done badly, you hand over your
accounts, your tracking, and a year of momentum to a team you’re stuck with.
Done well, paid media becomes one of the more predictable channels in the
business.
The nine
questions below are the ones we wish more buyers asked us. They surface fit,
competence, and risk in roughly that order. If an agency can’t answer them
clearly, walk. That includes us.
This piece
pairs nicely with our broader guide to choosing a marketing agency in Cyprus.
Here we focus specifically on PPC.
1. What’s the real KPI here, and will you push back if I name the wrong
one?
The wrong KPI
is worse than no KPI. It pushes the agency to optimise for the wrong outcome
and you pay for activity that doesn’t move the business.
A good agency
challenges you. Ask for “more leads” and they ask what a qualified
lead looks like, what your sales cycle is, and what a closed deal is worth.
They might tell you ROAS is the wrong metric because pipeline quality is your
real bottleneck.
A bad agency
writes down whatever you said. They promise “more leads” without
defining one. Six months later you have 800 form fills, three sales, and a
fight on your hands.
The agency that
asks about close rates and average deal size on the first call is the one you
want.
2. Who owns the ad accounts, pixels, and conversion data when we part ways?
This is the
single biggest trap in agency contracts. The agency builds your accounts, ships
your tracking, develops your audiences, then keeps it all when you leave.
Get it in
writing before you sign. Ask specifically about your Google Ads account, Meta
Business Manager, GA4 property, conversion API setup, customer match audiences,
and pixel ownership. All of these should sit on infrastructure you own, with
the agency given user access, not the other way around.
A good agency
answers in seconds. Your accounts are yours, here’s the offboarding checklist.
A bad agency
gets vague. “We use a managed account structure for efficiency.”
That’s code for: when we part ways, you walk out with nothing.
If you remember
one thing from this piece, remember this question.
3. What’s your pricing structure, and what should I actually expect to
spend?
Pricing in
Cyprus runs a wide spectrum, and almost nobody publishes it. Ranges below
exclude media spend.
•
Under €1,500 a month is starter
scope. One channel, usually Google Search, light reporting, limited
creative. Fine for a one-product business with simple buyer intent. Wrong for
anything with a long sales cycle.
•
€1,500 to €4,000 is growth
scope. Two or three channels, real conversion tracking, monthly strategic
reviews, creative iteration. Most Cyprus SMBs sit here.
•
€4,000 and above is
multi-channel. Search, social, video, programmatic, dedicated account
management, weekly optimisation. Regulated industries like forex, crypto, and
gaming usually start here.
Then ask:
management fee, percentage of media spend, or hybrid? Are creative costs
included? Reporting tools? Landing pages? Make them itemise.
For a deeper
breakdown of what marketing agencies in Cyprus actually charge across services,
see our Cyprus marketing agency cost guide.
4. What does a successful first 90 days look like, in numbers?
Vague answers
here are a gift. They mean the agency hasn’t done the work and is planning to
learn on your budget.
A good answer
is specific. Weeks one and two: audit, tracking fixes, baselines. Weeks three
to six: campaigns launched with CPA targets and creative variants. Weeks seven
to ten: data to optimise, with thresholds for kill, scale, iterate. Weeks
eleven and twelve: written readout against week one’s targets.
A bad answer
talks about “building the foundation” for 90 days with no targets
attached.
A red flag in
plain sight: any agency that guarantees specific results before seeing your
account, your data, or your competition is selling fiction. Walk.
Push for
numbers. CPA range? CTR on the first creative? What volume justifies a second
channel? If they say “depends,” make them define the dependencies.
5. Who runs my account day to day, and what’s the churn on that team?
You met the
senior strategist in the pitch. They aren’t running your account. The person
running it is usually a junior or mid-level specialist with several accounts on
their plate.
Ask: How long
have they been here? How many accounts do they manage? Will I meet them before
signing? What happens if they leave? Ask which platforms they’re personally
certified on. “We have all the certifications” is not a list.
A good agency
is upfront. They name the person, walk you through their experience, and
explain how handovers work.
A bad agency
keeps it fuzzy. “Our team” should make you nervous. Account churn at
PPC agencies in Cyprus is real, especially in fintech-adjacent shops where
talent gets poached every six months.
Ask the
question. Watch the body language.
And what about Premier Partner badges?
Take them with
a grain of salt. Google’s Premier Partner status is largely a function of
agency-wide ad spend across all clients, plus optimisation score thresholds. An
agency can hit Premier by managing volume, not by managing it well. The same
goes for award shelves; most regional digital marketing awards are pay-to-enter
and judged on case study writing, not on outcomes. Use badges as tiebreakers,
not selection criteria.
6. Have you run paid in my industry, or are you about to learn on my
budget?
Generalist
agencies say marketing is marketing. It isn’t. Channels and constraints change
dramatically by vertical, and the wrong agency burns three months figuring out
what an experienced one knew on day one.
A forex broker
hiring for paid media Cyprus asks about compliance review turnaround, banned
keyword handling, IB attribution, and FTD economics. Recovery from Meta account
bans matters more than the portfolio screenshot.
A Limassol
restaurant cares about completely different things: local search dominance,
Google Business Profile health, seasonal budget pacing for tourist months
versus locals, and how to compete with TheFork and TripAdvisor in the SERP.
A real estate
developer in Paphos wants long-funnel lead nurture, multi-language audiences
across Russian, Arabic, and English, and offline conversion tracking from
showroom visits.
Same channels.
Different skills. Ask for two clients in your industry, with permission to call
one. If the pitch deck is heavy on logos and the case studies skip real
numbers, that’s a tell. If they don’t have any, you’re paying for their
education.
7. What does the contract look like if results don’t show up by month
three?
Standard agency
contracts protect the agency. You commit to 6 or 12 months. Termination
requires notice and often penalties. Performance is rarely defined in writing.
A good agency
offers a contract with teeth on both sides. Defined success criteria for month
three. Clear escalation steps if those aren’t met: account review, scope reset,
partial refund, or termination without penalty. They commit to specifics in
ink.
A bad agency
hides behind ambiguity. “PPC takes time.” “Results vary.”
“You can’t measure attribution properly.” All true in fragments, all
weaponised against you.
Ask what month
three failure looks like, and what the unwind path is. Get it in writing.
Long contracts
aren’t a sign of confidence. They’re a sign of churn protection.
8. How do you handle attribution gaps, GA4 limitations, and consent mode?
This is your
competence test. If the agency can’t explain GA4’s modelled conversions, consent mode v2, or how server-side tracking
changes their reporting, they’re using 2018 playbooks in 2026.
A good answer
covers how they validate conversions against your CRM, when they trust GA4 and
when they don’t, how they handle the gap between GA4 and Google Ads, and
whether they implement server-side tagging or rely on browser-side pixels.
Bonus if they mention iOS privacy and offline conversion uploads.
A bad answer is
full of “data-driven” with no mechanism behind it. Worse: silence on
consent mode in a market where GDPR enforcement is tightening.
If your
conversion happens off the website (a phone call, a signed contract, a wired
deposit), this question is non-negotiable.
9. What would have to be true for you to tell us not to hire you?
Almost no
agency answers this honestly. Most won’t say no to revenue. They’ll fit you
into their model whether or not it makes sense.
A good agency
has a list ready. They’ll say they’re a bad fit if your average order value is
under €40, your sales cycle is shorter than your contract length, you don’t
have working analytics, your website has a clear conversion problem that paid
traffic will only amplify, or you’re using paid media to mask an unclear value
proposition.
A bad agency
says “we work with everyone.” That’s a tell. They take whoever signs
and figure it out later.
There’s a
buyer-side version of this question, too. Three signals that the problem is on
your side, not the agency’s:
•
You can’t name the KPI that
defines success in one sentence. Fix that before hiring anyone.
•
You don’t have working
analytics and you’re hoping the agency will sort it out. They might, but
you’ll spend month one paying agency rates to fix what a developer could fix in
a week.
•
You’re hiring to compensate for
a product that isn’t selling. Paid media amplifies what’s there. If the
offer doesn’t convert organically, paid won’t fix it.
A good Cyprus
PPC agency tells you to fix three things before spending a euro on Google Ads,
then helps you fix them, then runs the campaign.
Most Cyprus
agencies aren’t trying to scam you. They’re just not built for every business
that walks in, and they won’t tell you that themselves. The difference between
a six-month win and a six-month write-off is asking the right questions, then
walking when the answers don’t hold up. If you can’t get clean answers to these
nine questions from any agency you talk to, walk. That includes us. If the fit
is right, we’ll show our work in the first call. If it’s not, we’ll tell you. Book a call
here.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does PPC management cost in Cyprus?
Excluding media
spend, starter scope sits under €1,500 a month, growth scope runs €1,500 to
€4,000, and multi-channel programmes start at €4,000. Regulated industries like
forex, crypto, and gaming usually start in the higher tier. Always ask whether
the fee is fixed, a percentage of spend, or hybrid, and whether creative and
landing pages are included.
How long does PPC take to show results?
Plan for a
90-day cycle before judging an agency on outcomes. Weeks one and two go to
audit and tracking fixes, weeks three to six are launches, weeks seven to
twelve are optimisation and a written readout against the targets set on day
one. Anything shorter is anecdotal, anything longer is account neglect.
Is a Google Premier Partner badge a sign of quality?
Not really.
Premier status is largely a function of agency-wide ad spend across all
clients, plus optimisation score thresholds, not campaign quality on any single
account. Use it as a tiebreaker, not selection criteria.
Should I hire a freelancer or a PPC agency in Cyprus?
A freelancer
can be a good fit for a single channel, single product, and a clear KPI. A PPC
agency in Cyprus is the right call once you need multi-channel coordination,
conversion tracking that survives audits, creative iteration at volume, or
industry-specific expertise (especially in regulated verticals). The cost
difference is real, but so is the cost of a freelancer who quietly leaves at
the wrong moment.
What’s the typical contract length with a PPC agency in Cyprus?
Six to twelve
months is standard, but the more important question is what the contract says
about month three. A confident agency offers defined success criteria with an
unwind path if those aren’t met. A long contract without those clauses is churn
protection, not commitment.
About
Uveler: Uveler is a full-service
digital marketing agency in Limassol, Cyprus. We help Cyprus
businesses with SEO and AI Search, PPC
and paid media, branding,
web design and ecommerce, social
media, email marketing, and AI
automation. If you’re vetting a PPC agency in Cyprus and want a
second opinion (or want us in the running), let’s talk.