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07 · ResultsPlenty of agencies show you screenshots of likes and reach. We'd rather talk about profit and what each sale costs to win. Here's how we define a result, how we measure it every month, and a few anonymised pictures of the kind of work we do. Real names and real numbers come in a written case study, on request.
A result is money the business keeps, not a number that looks good on a slide. We measure the same few things on every account, report them in plain language every month, and let the boring metrics — profit and cost-per-sale — outrank the loud ones.
A big sales number means little once you take out cost of goods, fees, discounts and ad spend. We judge every channel on what's actually left at the end — and we'd rather grow a smaller number that's profitable than a bigger one that isn't.
Reach, impressions and likes don't pay anyone. We track what it costs to win a sale and what that customer is worth over time. When those two numbers move the right way, growth is real and it lasts.
One monthly update in plain language: what you spent, what came back, what worked, what didn't, and the next move. Numbers first, no vanity charts, and every budget decision written down. When something underperforms, you hear it from us before you have to ask.
Ad accounts, tracking, content, flows and search standing are yours. The point isn't a good month — it's a base that keeps earning whether or not we're still in the room. We hand over the playbooks as the systems settle in.
Likes, follower counts and impressions still get watched — they just never get to stand in for the result. If a metric can't be tied back to profit or cost-per-sale, it doesn't run the decision.
We keep client names private by default. Below are anonymised pictures of the kind of mandate we take on and the kind of outcome we work toward. The figures are illustrative placeholders, not claims — the verified numbers for any of these live in a written case study we share on request.
A multi-brand beauty group in the Gulf, strong on social but unsure which spend actually earned. We rebuilt tracking first, then ran paid, store and repeat-buyer flows as one budget judged on profit. Direction of travel over the engagement: cost-per-sale down [−X]% and repeat-buyer rate up [+Y]% across roughly [N] months. Verified figures in the written case study.
A GCC property developer drowning in cheap, unqualified enquiries. We tightened targeting and creative around buyer intent and reported on cost-per-qualified-lead, not raw form fills. Direction of travel: cost per qualified lead down [−X]% with qualified leads up [+Y]% over about [N] months, ad spend kept in the client's own accounts throughout. Verified figures in the written case study.
A fashion and retail brand selling across its own store, Amazon and Noon with three dashboards and no clear picture. We ran them as one, watched margin alongside sales, and cut the lines that looked busy but lost money. Direction of travel: blended return on ad spend up [+X]% and contribution margin up [+Y] points across roughly [N] months. Verified figures in the written case study.
A food-and-beverage group invisible in Arabic search and absent from AI answers. We built classic SEO and GEO together, in both languages, and reported rankings and AI mentions side by side. Direction of travel: first-page rankings up [+X] for priority terms and AI mentions up [+Y]% over about [N] months. Verified figures in the written case study.
Profiles are composites drawn from the kind of work we do, shared without names to protect our clients. We don't publish a logo wall, and we don't arrange reference calls with clients — the work speaks through a written case study, sent to serious enquiries.
Big, round numbers on a website are easy to invent and impossible to check. We'd rather earn your trust the honest way: a written case study, matched to your sector, with the context that makes a number mean something — what we started with, what changed, and over how long.
Tell us where you want to grow and we'll send back a clear plan — and a written case study close to your situation, so you can judge the work on numbers that mean something.
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