A performance marketing strategist's hard-won rule about walking away from deals that drain your team, your margins, and your sanity.
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. That's the core insight from performance marketing strategist Laura Abreu, who shared her experience on PPC Live The Podcast.
Abreu'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 from the start. Instead of pushing through or ignoring her instinct, she learned that early warning signals matter more than the contract size.
The lesson wasn't about the campaign itself. It was about recognizing that not every opportunity is worth taking, and that walking away early saves your team, your reputation, and your margins.
If you're an owner or marketer running paid search campaigns, your client roster directly affects your results. A partner who doubts your approach, changes goals mid-month, or pushes unrealistic timelines makes it nearly impossible to run solid PPC work. The time and energy spent managing a difficult relationship is time not spent optimizing for profitable accounts.
Abreu's takeaway applies whether you're an agency, a solo practitioner, or an owner managing your own campaigns: the hardest PPC decision isn't about keywords or bids. It's about protecting your business by knowing when to quit.
According to Laura Abreu's experience, your gut feeling is often the first signal. If something feels off during the pitch or onboarding, trust that instinct. Red flags include unclear expectations, pressure to deliver results faster than is realistic, or misalignment on what success looks like.
Beyond lost revenue, a difficult client relationship drains your team's morale and time that could go to profitable accounts. Abreu's experience shows that the opportunity cost of managing the wrong client far outweighs the contract value.
Walk away early if the client's goals are unrealistic, communication breaks down, or they push you to use tactics that compromise your agency's reputation or standards. The sooner you exit, the less damage to your business.
Client quality directly affects campaign quality. A partner who doubts your approach, ignores data, or changes goals mid-month makes it impossible to run solid PPC. Protecting your client roster protects your campaign performance and your bottom line.