The platform is
not the problem.
The system it runs
on usually is.
Most paid media accounts are technically functional.
The architecture beneath them is where the revenue exits.
Your campaigns are live. The spend is moving. The dashboard shows activity.
And yet the pipeline tells a different story every month.
The instinct is to adjust the creative. Tighten the audience. Test a new bid strategy.
These are the right moves on a correctly architected system.
On a broken one, they redistribute the loss. The numbers shift. The revenue does not follow.
Three faults account for
most underperforming
paid media accounts.
They are invisible at the campaign level. They only become visible when you start from the revenue and work backward. 404 starts from the revenue.
The campaign is being optimised against data that is wrong. The attribution model is misreporting which spend generates revenue — crediting the wrong channel, the wrong campaign, or the wrong touchpoint. Every budget decision built on that data is a structured guess.
Audiences built around interest signals attract curious people. Audiences built around commercial intent attract buyers. The difference does not show up in click-through rate. It shows up in close rate — and in the quality of conversations the sales team is having.
The paid media system is driving traffic to a destination that cannot convert it. The landing page architecture, offer framing, or next-step logic is misaligned with the intent of the audience arriving. Paid media sent to an unconverted destination funds bounces.
We do not manage campaigns.
We run revenue acquisition systems
governed by a commercial blueprint —
optimised for one thing: attributable pipeline per pound of spend.
Before any campaign is restructured, the attribution model is audited. If the data feeding the optimisation decisions is wrong, fixing the campaigns is pointless. Clean attribution first.
We map spend to pipeline accurately — so every decision made from that point forward is built on commercial reality, not platform reporting. This step alone typically reveals where the previous agency’s attribution was failing.
Audiences are not built from interest categories and demographic overlays. They are built from commercial intent signals — behaviours that indicate a buyer is in an active decision process.
For B2B SaaS: role, seniority, company growth signals, and category intent. For Private Aviation: wealth indicators, travel frequency, and charter research behaviour — signals most agencies do not know exist.
Every campaign is built against the Glitch-to-Gold blueprint — specific channel targets, LTV-weighted acquisition costs, and pipeline contribution projections defined before the campaign launches.
The blueprint is not aspirational. It is the governing document. If a campaign is not producing attribution-verified pipeline at the projected cost, it is examined and recalibrated — not left running because the platform dashboard looks acceptable.
The monthly report leads with one number: attributable pipeline generated this month. Platform metrics are tracked internally as diagnostic signals — not presented as success metrics.
Impressions, CTR, engagement rate, and quality score tell us whether the system is behaving correctly. They do not appear on the cover of the client report. If the client wants them, they are in the appendix.
What was correctly calibrated in January may be wrong by April. A competitor changes positioning. A feature ships. The ICP shifts. Every quarter, without exception, the architecture is examined against current commercial reality.
The audience architecture and campaign structure are recalibrated where assumptions have shifted — before the next campaign cycle begins. The client is informed of every assumption change and why it was made.
Not every channel
is right for every business.
The blueprint decides.
Platform selection is determined by the client’s ICP, average deal value, and where commercial intent signals are strongest. We do not activate a platform because it is popular.
Audiences built against commercial intent signals and lookalike models seeded from closed-won customer data — not interest categories. Creative structured around the commercial fault the product resolves, not feature benefits.
Keyword architecture built around commercial and transactional intent — not informational volume. Negative keyword frameworks that exclude research traffic before it consumes budget. Attribution mapped from click to closed deal.
Campaign architecture against specific ICP job titles and company growth signals. Content-led sequences that build commercial familiarity before asking for a conversion — because LinkedIn buyers do not convert cold.
This service is right for you if —
This service is not right for you if —
Not a campaign.
A revenue acquisition system
with a defined accountability structure.
Every deliverable is tied to a commercial outcome. Nothing is produced for its own sake.
What serious buyers ask
before they apply.
Anything not answered here will be addressed in our response to your application — within 48 hours.
404 Agency runs paid media on Meta (Facebook and Instagram), Google (Search, Performance Max, and Display), and LinkedIn. Platform selection is determined by the blueprint — based on the client’s ICP, average deal value, and where commercial intent signals are strongest. Not all platforms are activated for every client.
All paid media is reported against attributable pipeline — not platform metrics. ROAS, CTR, and CPL are tracked internally as diagnostic signals. The client-facing report leads with one number: what the spend returned in traceable revenue pipeline this month.
For new clients, yes — in almost every case. The audit is the only way to establish whether the attribution infrastructure is sound, which platform is correct for this ICP, and what the acquisition cost needs to be against the client’s LTV. A paid media programme built without that foundation is built on assumption.
Both. If an existing account has historical data, 404 begins with an attribution and account archaeology audit before restructuring. Historical data — even from a poorly structured account — contains signal value. Starting from scratch removes that signal. The audit determines the correct approach.
Attribution infrastructure and audience architecture are established in month one. Meaningful pipeline data typically emerges between weeks six and ten — the point at which enough conversion events exist to draw statistically valid conclusions. Projections made before that point are directional, not definitive.
Yes — in the lead intelligence capacity. 404 owns the commercial architecture, the attribution framework, and the reporting standard. The existing team executes within that structure. This requires direct platform access and a coordination protocol signed before the engagement begins. Without that structure, 404 does not take the engagement.
404 Agency specialises in paid media for B2B SaaS companies (Series A–C, enterprise, and growth-stage) and Private Aviation operators (charter companies, FBOs, aircraft management, and private terminal operators). Both sectors share a commercial profile where acquisition precision matters more than acquisition volume.
Every engagement begins with the application. 404 responds within 48 hours with a specific assessment and a proposed next step — either a Diagnostic Conversation or a Pre-Audit Intelligence Report. Both are paid and credited against the full audit cost if you proceed.
Paid media does not operate in isolation. These three capabilities directly affect what paid media can produce.
The campaigns are not the problem.
The layer beneath them is.
We have examined enough accounts to know exactly where the fault hides —
and exactly what it costs per month it goes unexamined.
Not ready to apply? Submit a question and we will respond within 48 hours.