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How PPC agencies can plan ad-spend under tight market conditions.

This guide shows PPC agencies how to budget for a recession by protecting core profitability. You'll learn to build a survival cashflow model, make strategic cost cuts without harming service, and implement contingency planning for client ad spend volatility. The focus is on practical steps to maintain agency health when market conditions tighten.

Rayhaan Moughal
Sidekick Accounting
February 20269 min read
Key takeaways
  • Focus on gross margin, not just revenue. In a downturn, protecting your agency's gross margin (the money left after paying for team and freelancers) is more important than chasing top-line growth at any cost.
  • Build a survival cashflow model with a 6-month runway. Model your worst-case scenario for client ad spend and payments to see exactly how long your cash will last, giving you time to act.
  • Make strategic cost cuts, not across-the-board slashes. Protect client-facing roles and core tech, but scrutinise non-essential software, discretionary spending, and fixed overheads that don't directly drive profit.
  • Implement contingency planning for every major client. Have clear, pre-agreed plans for what happens if a client pauses or drastically reduces their ad spend, so you're not caught off guard.
  • Use volatility as a selling point. Position your agency's expertise in efficient budget management and ROAS (return on ad spend) as a critical service when every marketing pound counts.

What is PPC agency recession budgeting really about?

PPC agency recession budgeting is about shifting your financial plan from growth mode to resilience mode. It means proactively managing your agency's costs and cash flow to survive a period where client ad budgets may shrink or become unpredictable. The goal is not to stop spending, but to spend smarter and ensure your core business remains profitable.

For a PPC agency, this is uniquely challenging. Your clients' marketing budgets are often the first to be cut. Your own revenue is directly tied to their ad spend, whether you charge a percentage of spend or a fixed management fee. A good recession budget anticipates this volatility and builds buffers to protect your team and operations.

Think of it as financial shock absorption. You're preparing your agency to handle bumps in the road without crashing. This involves looking at every part of your finances, from your own fixed costs to how you structure client agreements. The most prepared agencies don't just survive a downturn, they often gain market share as less-prepared competitors struggle.

Why do PPC agencies need a special approach to recession planning?

PPC agencies face a double exposure in an economic downturn. First, client marketing budgets often get reduced. Second, the cost to acquire a customer through ads can increase as competition for remaining clicks intensifies. This squeezes both your revenue and your ability to deliver results, requiring a specific financial defence plan.

Your revenue model is key. If you charge a percentage of ad spend, a 20% client budget cut means an immediate 20% drop in your fee from that client. Fixed-fee models offer more revenue predictability, but clients may still seek to renegotiate or pause services. Your planning must account for these direct hits to your top line.

Furthermore, your service delivery costs don't always fall in line. You still need skilled PPC managers to optimise tighter budgets for maximum ROAS. You can't just cut your team proportionally. This mismatch makes traditional business budgeting ineffective. You need a model built for the specific cash flow and margin pressures of a performance marketing agency.

Specialist accountants for PPC agencies understand this unique pressure point. They help you build financial plans that separate your operational stability from the inevitable fluctuations in client ad spend.

How do you build a survival cashflow model for your PPC agency?

A survival cashflow model is a worst-case scenario forecast that shows how long your cash will last if client spend drops. Start by listing all your cash inflows (client fees) and outflows (salaries, software, rent). Then, create a pessimistic forecast reducing client fees by 20%, 30%, or 40% based on their risk profile. The model tells you your financial runway.

First, get crystal clear on your monthly "burn rate". This is the total cash your agency spends each month to keep the lights on. Include all salaries, freelancer costs, software subscriptions (like Google Ads platforms, analytics tools, project management software), rent, and utilities. Don't guess, use your actual bank statements from the last three months.

Next, forecast your cash inflows pessimistically. Categorise your clients: which ones are in stable industries, and which are in volatile ones? Model scenarios where your most at-risk clients reduce spend by 50% or pause entirely. If you have a client representing 30% of your revenue in the travel sector, model them pausing for three months. See what happens to your bank balance.

The goal is to know your "runway" – how many months you can operate if your worst-case income scenario happens. A safe target for uncertain times is a minimum 6-month cash runway. If your model shows only 3 months, you know you need to build reserves or reduce your burn rate immediately. This isn't about predicting the future perfectly, it's about stress-testing your finances. To see exactly where your agency stands on cash flow and financial resilience, take our free Agency Profit Score – it's a quick 5-minute assessment that gives you a personalised report on your financial health.

What are the right strategic cost cuts for a PPC agency?

Strategic cost cuts protect your agency's ability to deliver client work and win new business, while eliminating waste. Focus on non-essential software, discretionary spending, and renegotiating fixed costs. Never make across-the-board percentage cuts, as this harms critical functions. Always cut costs with a scalpel, not an axe.

Start with software and subscriptions. Audit every tool your team uses. How many different project management, communication, and reporting tools do you have? Can you consolidate? For each tool, ask: "If we cancelled this tomorrow, would it directly stop us from running client campaigns or getting paid?" If the answer is no, it's a candidate for cutting or pausing.

Look at freelancer and contractor usage. Are you using specialists for one-off tasks that could be handled in-house now that workload may be lighter? Could you bring some flexible support work back to your core team to improve their utilisation rate (the percentage of their paid time spent on billable client work)?

Renegotiate fixed costs. Contact your office landlord, internet provider, and other suppliers. Can you switch to a cheaper plan, get a temporary reduction, or move to a smaller space? Many providers would rather offer a discount than lose a customer entirely. This is a key part of strategic cost cuts that preserves cash without damaging operations.

Protect client-facing and revenue-generating roles at all costs. Your PPC managers, account directors, and new business leads are your lifeline. Cutting there is a false economy that damages service and future growth. As highlighted in a Google report on marketing in uncertainty, brands that maintain strategic marketing efforts recover faster, meaning your team's expertise is your product.

How does contingency planning protect your agency from client budget shocks?

Contingency planning means having pre-agreed steps for what happens if a client needs to pause or drastically cut their ad spend. It transforms a potential crisis into a managed process. This protects your revenue forecast, helps you manage your team's workload, and maintains a professional relationship with the client for when budgets return.

For each major client, draft a simple "pause plan". This document outlines the notice period required, what "paused service" looks like (e.g., basic account monitoring vs. full management), and the associated reduced fee. It also details the steps to restart the campaign. Having this conversation proactively, before trouble hits, is far easier than scrambling during a panic.

Build flexibility into your service agreements. Can you offer a stripped-back "essential maintenance" retainer at a lower cost, instead of a full cancellation? This keeps some revenue flowing and maintains the client relationship. It's often more valuable to keep a client at a 50% retainer than to lose them completely and face the cost of acquiring a new one later.

This proactive contingency planning also applies to your own suppliers. Do you have agreements with key freelancers that allow you to scale their time up or down with reasonable notice? Aligning your cost flexibility with your revenue flexibility is a hallmark of a resilient agency model. It turns fixed costs into variable ones where possible.

What financial metrics should PPC agencies watch like a hawk in a downturn?

In a downturn, shift your focus from top-line revenue to profitability and cash efficiency metrics. The three most critical numbers are gross margin percentage, cash conversion cycle, and client concentration risk. Monitoring these weekly gives you an early warning system for financial stress.

Gross margin is your revenue minus the direct cost of delivering the work (primarily your PPC team's salaries). It's the true profit from your services before overheads. In tough times, a 50-60% gross margin is a strong target for a PPC agency. If your margin drops below 40%, you're at risk because there's not enough left to cover your fixed costs and leave a profit.

Track your cash conversion cycle – how long it takes from doing the work to getting paid. Calculate your average "debtor days" (how long clients take to pay you). If it creeps from 30 days to 45 or 60, it's a huge strain on your cash. You're funding client marketing for longer. Implement stricter payment terms and follow-up procedures.

Measure client concentration. What percentage of your revenue comes from your top 3 clients? If it's more than 50%, you are highly vulnerable. The loss of one major client could be catastrophic. Use a downturn as motivation to diversify your client base by industry and size. This metric is a direct measure of your agency's risk profile.

How can smart PPC agency recession budgeting become a competitive advantage?

Smart budgeting allows you to offer stability and strategic value when your competitors are panicking. You can position your agency as a safe pair of hands that maximizes ROAS on every pound, which is exactly what clients need when budgets are tight. This turns a defensive financial strategy into an offensive growth one.

Communicate your financial stability to clients and prospects. In uncertain times, clients want to work with partners who will be around for the long term. Your disciplined approach to your own business is a signal of your professionalism and reliability. It builds trust, which is the foundation of client retention.

Develop and pitch services tailored to the downturn. This could be a "budget efficiency audit" for prospects, or a "recession ROAS pack" for existing clients focused on protecting their bottom line. Show that you understand the new market reality and have the tools to navigate it. This demonstrates immediate, relevant expertise.

Use the opportunity to hire great talent. When other agencies make panic layoffs, top PPC talent becomes available. If your survival cashflow model shows you have a solid runway, you might be able to selectively strengthen your team with individuals who would normally be out of reach. This sets you up for stronger growth when the market recovers.

Ultimately, the agencies that master PPC agency recession budgeting don't just survive. They often emerge leaner, more efficient, and with a stronger market position. They use the period to build a more resilient business model that thrives in any economic climate. For ongoing strategies, our insights library covers these commercial topics in depth.

Important Disclaimer

This article provides general information only and does not constitute professional financial advice. Business circumstances vary, and the strategies discussed may not be suitable for every agency. You should not act on this information without seeking advice tailored to your specific situation. While we strive to ensure accuracy, we cannot guarantee that this information is current, complete, or applicable to your business. Always consult with a qualified professional before making financial decisions.

Questions agency owners ask

What should PPC agencies focus on during a recession?

PPC agencies should focus on gross margin rather than just revenue. Protecting the gross margin, which is the money left after paying for team and freelancers, is crucial during downturns.

How can PPC agencies build a survival cashflow model?

To build a survival cashflow model, start by listing all cash inflows and outflows. Create a pessimistic forecast that reduces client fees based on their risk profile to determine how long your cash will last.

What are strategic cost cuts for PPC agencies?

Strategic cost cuts involve protecting client-facing roles and core technology while scrutinising non-essential software and discretionary spending. It's important to avoid across-the-board cuts that could harm critical functions.

How does contingency planning help PPC agencies?

Contingency planning helps PPC agencies manage potential crises by having pre-agreed steps for when a client needs to pause or cut their ad spend. This approach maintains professional relationships and protects revenue forecasts.

What financial metrics should PPC agencies monitor during a downturn?

PPC agencies should monitor gross margin percentage, cash conversion cycle, and client concentration risk. These metrics provide an early warning system for financial stress and help ensure profitability.

Rayhaan Moughal
Rayhaan Moughal
Accountant and CFO advisor to agencies
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