How to choose ppc agencies

We independently track 77 ppc agencies, scored on the same weighted criteria. Overall scores currently range from 9 to 86 (average 69/100), led by Disruptiveadvertising. This guide explains how the rankings work and what to weigh before you shortlist.

How we score ppc agencies

Every agency is rated on five weighted criteria. The overall score is the weighted average across the criteria for which data is available.

CriterionWeight
Website Presence20%
Search Visibility20%
Trust & Credibility20%
Market Presence15%
Customer Satisfaction10%

What ppc agencies commonly offer

Services most frequently listed across the ppc agencies we track:

  • Paid social25
  • SEO25
  • Paid search20
  • Conversion rate optimization18
  • Content marketing17
  • Paid Media15
  • Email marketing14
  • Social media marketing14

What they charge

Pricing models used by the 77 of 77 ppc agencies that disclose pricing:

  • Custom monthly retainer delivered through a cross-functional "growth squad" model. NoGood explicitly says engagements are structured as monthly retainers rather than fixed packages, and third-party comparisons describe the retainer as scope- or squad-composition-based.
  • Custom quote agency with a mixed model: most core paid media / performance marketing work appears to be custom-scoped ongoing engagements, while its Data Intelligence & Measurement service is explicitly sold as project-based.
  • Custom quote engagement model with both per-project work and ongoing agency services; public evidence supports project-based pricing for at least some named Hallam products, while third-party directories indicate Hallam also sells larger custom projects and bills by the hour.
  • Custom quote engagements, most likely a mix of per-project work and ongoing monthly retainer work, with hourly-based pricing benchmarks on directories.
  • Custom quote engagements, primarily per-project for website/branding work and ongoing monthly retainer-style digital marketing management; directory data also indicates hourly-based billing is used internally/for quoting.
  • Custom quote for agency engagements, with evidence of project-based and hourly pricing on third-party directories. Croud’s own site positions engagements as flexible full-service or specialist support, which suggests bespoke scoping rather than fixed packages.
  • Custom quote for enterprise performance marketing engagements; evidence suggests a mix of minimum project budget thresholds and, on some directory profiles, hourly-rate-style positioning, but Performics does not publish standard packages or self-serve prices on its own site.
  • Custom quote with pay-per-result / pay-per-goal billing. Leadzai states you only pay when campaigns deliver the defined goal, with goals sold as either clicks or leads; the platform shows a customized cost-per-goal during campaign setup and the buyer chooses a monthly budget based on that rate.
  • Custom quote, primarily a fixed monthly retainer for ongoing performance marketing / paid media management, with some one-off audit/strategy work also offered.
  • Custom quote, primarily monthly retainer engagements for ongoing e-commerce marketing services, with some project-based work and hourly pricing indicated by third-party directories. BlueTuskr positions itself as an extension of the client's team and refers to onboarding and ongoing contracts on its service pages.
  • Custom quote, primarily monthly retainer engagements; white-label work is explicitly described as clearly scoped monthly retainers, with scope-change addenda at a pre-agreed rate. EvenDigit also appears to take smaller fixed-scope projects and may price some services hourly, based on third-party directory profiles.
  • Custom quote, typically a hybrid PPC/demand-gen pricing model: an upfront flat setup fee for the first month (and on at least one page, the first month or two), then an ongoing monthly flat fee plus a percentage of ad spend. They also say fixed monthly pricing may be available when ad spend is predictable. Third-party directories additionally list them as hourly-priced and project-based for directory classification.
  • Custom quote, typically an ongoing monthly agency engagement governed by a Statement of Work, with Brainlabs invoicing monthly in arrears. Engagements appear to center on media planning/buying, analytics/measurement, creative, and SEO/AI visibility work for larger advertisers rather than fixed self-serve packages.
  • Custom quote, typically structured as ongoing monthly agency services/retainer for digital marketing and PPC, with project-based engagements for web development, creative, data, and technology work.
  • Custom quote, with both per-project and ongoing monthly retainer-style engagements. Public evidence points to Aumcore selling full-service digital marketing and web development as scoped engagements rather than fixed self-serve packages; directory profiles consistently show a minimum project budget and hourly-rate bands, while Aumcore's own service pages emphasize tailored strategy, campaign management, optimization, and budget planning.
  • Custom quote; evidence suggests a marketing-agency style mix of monthly service packages/retainers and possibly project-based work, but the exact commercial model for the entity at uam.io could not be confirmed because the domain currently resolves to a GoDaddy for-sale page rather than an operating agency website.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, most consistently evidenced as a monthly retainer and/or ongoing managed-services relationship; directory data also indicates hourly-rate positioning, and Tinuiti’s own intake flow suggests engagements are scoped around monthly advertising spend. For media buying specifically, Tinuiti discusses campaign media being bought on CPM or flat-rate impression models, but that describes ad inventory pricing rather than Tinuiti’s agency fee.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, most consistently evidenced as monthly retainer work for ongoing PR/marketing services, with project-based work also available. Third-party directory data also shows an hourly-rate framing for some engagements.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, most consistently presented by third-party directories as project-based and/or monthly-retainer style work for paid media, email, and SMS management, with hourly-equivalent rate bands published on directories rather than on One 10 Media's own site.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, most likely per-project and/or ongoing retainer-based for digital marketing and performance marketing services; exact fee structure is not published. Public evidence shows Amsive sells broad multi-service engagements rather than fixed self-serve plans, and directories indicate a minimum project threshold rather than package pricing.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, primarily monthly retainer / ongoing managed-services relationships for digital marketing and media management, with some strategic advisory or project-based work. Evidence from Clutch indicates ongoing monthly spend relationships, while directories consistently show a minimum project budget rather than fixed packages.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, primarily monthly retainer / ongoing management for performance marketing, plus one-off project work (e.g. PPC tuneups) and custom-priced training; the agency also sells some training on a per-seat basis for public AI workshops.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, primarily monthly retainers for PR and digital marketing/social media work, with hourly billing bands and project minimums also indicated by third-party directories.
  • Custom-quoted agency engagements, typically sold as bespoke website projects and ongoing monthly digital marketing/SEO/PPC management rather than public fixed-price plans. The agency repeatedly describes bespoke solutions, custom designed quotes, SEO/packages, and monthly reporting, which points to a custom quote model with recurring service retainers for ongoing marketing work.
  • Custom-quoted agency pricing, typically structured as a monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing services. KlientBoost’s own site says they provide multiple pricing options tailored to goals, timelines, strategies, and team size; their service pages also explicitly reference common agency models such as flat monthly retainers, percentage of ad spend, and performance-based pricing with a base fee plus bonuses.
  • Custom-quoted B2B advertising engagement, most consistent with ongoing monthly management/retainer work, with some project-based scopes. Dragon360 explicitly says every engagement/program is customized, and client reviews describe ongoing monthly management of digital advertising plus longer-term agency partnerships.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagement, primarily monthly retainer-based for ongoing SEM/PPC/SEO/CRO work, with at least one public indication of performance-oriented compensation and a short opt-out arrangement rather than a fixed long-term package.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, most likely monthly retainer and/or scoped ongoing service engagements rather than self-serve plans. Third-party directories also publish an hourly-rate band and minimum project size, suggesting WPromote sells customized agency retainers/projects instead of fixed public packages.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, most plausibly a monthly retainer and/or ongoing management model for PPC, SEO, Paid Social, Digital PR, CRO, and consultancy. The agency’s own site repeatedly frames services as ongoing campaign management/strategy work and its quote form asks prospects to select a monthly budget, which strongly suggests recurring monthly engagements rather than fixed public packages.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, most plausibly sold as project-based work and/or ongoing service retainers for SEO, PPC, CRO, digital PR, content, design, and development. Public evidence does not show fixed packages or public self-serve prices; directory listings point to a minimum project budget rather than standardized plans.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, primarily monthly retainer-based and/or ongoing service engagements for PPC, paid social, SEO, CRO, and related marketing services. Public evidence also shows they sell into larger scoped project budgets and describe agency pricing as an ongoing investment rather than fixed packaged plans.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagement, typically an ongoing monthly management/retainer-style partnership for PPC, Paid Social, and/or SEO rather than fixed packages. Mabo explicitly positions itself as flexible and bespoke, with support delivered as standalone services or a wider multi-channel strategy, and emphasizes no fixed-term/long-term contracts.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most consistent with monthly retainer and/or ongoing agency management for PPC, SEO, CRO, paid social, marketing automation, and web work; project-based website engagements are also indicated by directory minimum project sizes.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most likely a mix of monthly retainer and project-based work, with hourly billing benchmarks published on agency directories. Embryo’s own site consistently pushes "Talk to us" / personalised audits rather than fixed packages, while service pages describe ongoing campaign management and monthly reporting.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most plausibly a mix of monthly retainer and ongoing project work; directory listings also indicate they can work on smaller fixed-scope projects and bill at an implied hourly rate.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most plausibly a monthly retainer/ongoing managed-service model for PPC, paid social, SEO, and related performance marketing work. Public evidence also suggests they may charge a one-time setup/onboarding fee in at least some Google Ads engagements.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, primarily monthly/ongoing service relationships for PPC, SEO, paid media, CRO, content, and related strategy/execution work; also project-based scopes are evident from directory/review data.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, with evidence of both ongoing monthly/retainer-style work and one-off project/strategy work. Positioning on Clutch emphasizes a "B2B Google Ads Consultancy - One Time Strategy," while client reviews also show ongoing PPC, social media, email, SEO, and web work.
  • Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, with strong evidence of a monthly retainer / monthly management-fee model for retained services; they also appear to take project-based work and can bill hourly for some scopes.
  • Custom-quoted growth marketing engagements that appear to be primarily monthly retainer-based, with some project-based work and possible hourly billing references on directories. Power Digital positions itself as a full-service strategic partner across media, SEO, social, creative, CRO, analytics, consulting, and data infrastructure rather than publishing fixed packages on its own site.
  • Custom-quoted monthly agency retainer that is commonly billed as a percentage of managed ad spend. Multiple third-party sources indicate Metric Theory engagements are typically ongoing retainers for PPC / paid social management rather than fixed-price packages.
  • Custom-quoted monthly PPC management on a fixed-fee retainer, with month-to-month billing and no long-term contract. PPC Geeks explicitly says it bills a fixed monthly fee rather than taking a cut of profits, and third-party directory/review sources indicate engagements commonly start around a recurring monthly management fee.
  • Custom-quoted monthly retainer / ongoing agency engagement for full-funnel ecommerce growth and retention services, with some projects also scoped as larger engagements. The company describes partnerships as "full-funnel engagements" and a careers page references "monthly retainer deliverables," indicating recurring-retainer billing rather than pay-per-lead or pay-per-appointment.
  • Custom-quoted monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing services (SEO, PPC, paid social), with some project-based/audit work. Dark Horse’s own site pushes a free audit and then a tailored scope; third-party directories/reviews indicate ongoing monthly engagements and also list project minimums/hourly bands.
  • Custom-quoted monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing/advertising management, with contracts defining a maximum monthly fee; may also include media markup. Third-party directories also list project-based minimums and hourly rate bands.
  • Custom-quoted monthly retainer for PPC/SEO engagements, with evidence of ongoing management fees and directory-listed hourly/minimum-project bands. Clutch also lists a packaged PPC offering starting monthly, so the public evidence points to retainer-based ongoing engagements rather than pay-per-lead or pay-per-appointment.
  • Custom-quoted ongoing PPC / paid media management engagement, most consistent with a monthly retainer or ongoing service relationship rather than fixed public packages. Black Propeller describes a consultation -> audit & proposal -> partnership process and personalized strategy/management, while third-party directories also list hourly-rate bands and minimum project budgets.
  • Custom-quoted PPC agency engagement, most likely ongoing monthly management/retainer rather than fixed packages. Metric PPC describes campaigns as custom-tailored, discusses monthly budgets, monthly reporting, and ongoing optimization/account management; for its Hulu/CTV offering (Metric+) it explicitly says clients choose monthly budgets and there is no long-term commitment.
  • Custom-quoted PPC agency pricing, primarily monthly management engagements; Hanapin’s own materials also describe retainer-based support, project-by-project work, PPC audits, and contracts for a specific number of hours per month.
  • Custom-quoted PPC management engagement, most consistently evidenced as ongoing monthly management/retainer-style work rather than fixed packages. Public directory profiles also show hourly-rate bands and minimum project budgets, but Excella PPC's own site does not publish standard plans or package pricing.
  • Flat-fee monthly SaaS subscription for Amazon PPC automation, with a custom-quoted managed/full-management option also billed monthly.
  • Hybrid custom pricing. Sculpt sells primarily on flat monthly retainers for ongoing B2B social media work, with separate project fees for consulting and one-off campaigns. Within retainers, they use a Content Unit-based scoping model for content production, and some services are sold as bounded monthly ranges or single-campaign packages.
  • Hybrid monthly retainer + percentage of ad spend for PPC management; custom quote for larger spend levels. Search Scientists publicly sells ongoing PPC management on a monthly basis, with pricing tied to both a fixed base fee and a variable percentage of monthly ad spend.
  • Hybrid monthly retainer pricing with named packages plus add-ons: a month-to-month hourly-support package (Guide), an annual paid-media retainer package for startups (Ascent), a custom/tiered annual growth package tied to media spend (Summit), and separately priced add-ons/projects for SEO/GEO, dashboards, content, and marketing operations.
  • Hybrid monthly retainer tied to ad spend, with custom quotes. G2 states ADM uses a standard agency model charging the greater of 12% of ad spend or a $5,000 monthly minimum; the company’s own site indicates engagements are scoped around ongoing monthly marketing budgets rather than fixed public packages.
  • Hybrid offering: (1) custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements that appear to be billed as monthly retainer and/or project-based work, and (2) a separate SaaS email marketing product (OpenMoves OM3) sold on subscription tiers with optional full-service add-ons.
  • Hybrid pricing. CIENCE GO Digital appears to be sold as part of a broader graph8/CIENCE platform subscription for programmatic advertising, with CPM-based media buying and a monthly platform/managed-services fee. Evidence also shows custom-quoted managed engagements and directory-listed hourly/minimum-budget bands for the agency overall.
  • Hybrid. Convertics publicly shows two pricing approaches: (1) custom-quoted agency services for performance/growth marketing, ecommerce growth marketing, lead generation, CRO, and PPC; and (2) a published monthly subscription for its 'Ecommerce Automated Marketing' platform, billed per month with separate required ad spend minimums.
  • Monthly PPC management retainer priced as a percentage of monthly ad spend, plus a one-time setup fee; custom quote. The agency separates media spend (paid directly to the ad platform) from Falcon's management fee.
  • Monthly retainer / ongoing monthly service, with three custom-quoted engagement types: standalone single-channel Growth services, Growth retainers, and senior-led Growth partnerships.
  • Monthly retainer with tiered demand-generation packages and custom quotes; packages are differentiated by scope and by whether the Demand Gen Manager is US-based or MX-based.
  • Primarily a custom monthly flat-fee retainer for ongoing digital marketing management, with service-specific monthly tiers published on HawkSEM pages. HawkSEM also publicly says PPC agencies may use percentage-of-ad-spend, performance-based, or hybrid pricing, but HawkSEM states it prefers a flat monthly management fee. Some services are offered month-to-month, and Amazon PPC also mentions optional short-term 1- or 2-month engagements.
  • Primarily a custom monthly retainer agency, with one publicly priced startup package. Directive also sells at least one low-ticket self-serve digital course. Third-party directories/review aggregators suggest custom engagements can also be discussed in project-budget terms, but the agency’s own site frames the managed-services offer as ongoing monthly billing.
  • Primarily a monthly retainer-based, full-service growth marketing agency engagement; Ladder also currently markets itself as offering "performance pricing," but no public formula or per-lead/per-meeting rate was found. Engagements appear custom-quoted rather than sold as fixed public plans.
  • Primarily custom monthly retainer pricing for PPC, SEO, social media marketing, and design/development, with service-specific starting prices published on a third-party pricing profile. The agency’s own site says engagements are custom-built after a discovery call rather than sold as fixed packages.
  • Primarily custom-quote B2B agency engagements for media, creative, data, cloud, and CRM services; publicly visible fixed pricing exists for Jellyfish Training as per-seat course purchases, with many 1-day courses sold individually and private team sessions quoted separately.
  • Primarily custom-quoted agency engagements with monthly billing/retainer-style management fees, plus hourly billing signals from directories. Peak Ace also publishes a packaged SMB offer (“Peak Ace Go”) that appears to charge a management fee equal to 15% of ad budget, with extra monthly fees for additional markets/languages.
  • Primarily custom-quoted agency engagements: per-project for website/design/development work, ongoing monthly retainer for digital marketing/performance services, and at least one named always-on growth retainer product (Gravity AI).
  • Primarily custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, likely structured as ongoing monthly/retainer-style agency services for channels like affiliate, Amazon/marketplaces, paid media, SEO/GEO, email, and related consulting. eAccountable also publicly offers at least one standalone performance-based service: Amazon Revenue Recovery, billed purely as a commission on recovered funds.
  • Primarily custom-quoted enterprise services engagements, with evidence of per-project and hourly billing on agency directories. For Merkle’s own CXM/Data Accelerator productized offering, the pricing model is usage-based/pay-as-you-go based on implemented modules and data volume.
  • Primarily custom-quoted monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing (SEO, PPC, creative/content), with evidence of month-to-month contracts; web development is also sold as hourly, monthly retainer, or project-based.
  • Primarily flat-rate subscription pricing tied to the advertiser's last month's ad spend, usually billed upfront for 6-month terms. Karooya also sells add-on automation modules and some done-for-you services with custom quotes or stated starting monthly fees.
  • Primarily monthly management fees for digital marketing services, priced either as a flat monthly retainer at lower spend tiers or as a percentage of monthly ad spend at higher tiers. Contract pricing changes by term length (6, 12, or 18 months), with discounts for longer commitments. They also publish some fixed-fee offerings such as a $499 one-time SEO technical audit, $149/month local listing management, small-business website packages with setup fee + monthly payments, and hourly creative/video editing add-ons.
  • Primarily monthly package/retainer pricing for ongoing digital marketing services, with tiered service packages published for PPC, SEO, social media marketing, and email marketing. Clutch and Effeect’s own package pages indicate fixed monthly plans rather than pay-per-lead or pay-per-appointment pricing.
  • Primarily monthly retainer pricing for digital marketing services, with custom quotes by service line; also offers one-time project pricing for web design/development. The site explicitly says engagements are month-to-month and backed by a written performance guarantee, while PPC is billed as a monthly fee plus ad spend.
  • Primarily monthly retainer pricing for ongoing digital marketing/creative services, plus custom-quote PPC management tied to monthly ad spend, plus some fixed-fee ancillary services and per-feed/per-SKU pricing for feed management.
  • Self-serve monthly SaaS subscription, with tiered plans published on Uplifted’s own pricing page; also described in the FAQ as customized by team size and asset requirements for quote-based sales conversations.
3Q/DEPT
$300,000-$700,000 / month
Accelerated Digital Media
$5,000+ / month
AdVenture Media Group
$100 - $149 / hr
Amsive
$25,000-$50,000 minimum budget
Aumcore
$50-$149 / hr
Bastion Agency
$5,500-$10,000 / month
Bastion Elevate
$5,500-$10,000 / month
Bind Media
$150-$199 / hr
Black Propeller
$100-$149 / hr
BlueTuskr
$100-$149 / hr
Boundify
$2,000-$8,000/mo
Cardinal Digital Marketing
$3,000-$15,000/month
Climb Online
$100 - $149 / hr
Convertics
EU$ 69–99 / month
Croud
$10,000 to over $100,000 per project
Dark Horse
£2,500 / month
Digital Drew SEM
$750-$1,000 / mo
Digital Position
$1,500-$4,000 / mo
Directiveconsulting
$6,500/mo and up
DiscoverMyBusiness
$2,500-$25,000 / month
Disruptiveadvertising
$100-$149 / hr
Dragon360
$30,000/month to $200,000/year
eAccountable
$5,000-$20,000+ / month
Effeect
$800-$3,000/month
Elevato
$150-$199/hr
Elite SEM
$100-$149/hr
Embryo
$100-$149 / hr
EvenDigit
< $25/hr
Evolved Search
$1,000+ per project
Excella PPC
$10,000-$49,999 typical project spend
Flycast Media
$1,000-$10,000
Gatorworks
$10,000-$49,999 per project
Global Search Marketing
$100-$149 / hr
CIENCE GO Digital
$499/mo-$2,499/mo
Hallam
£2,000-£5,680 per project
Hanapin Marketing
$100–$149 / hr
HawkSEM
$1,200-$10,000+ / mo
Impression
$150-$199 / hr
Jellyfish
$495-$1,099 ex tax per course seat
JumpFly
$250-$350 / mo
Karooya
$300-$3,000 / 6 months
Klientboost
$100-$149 / hr
Ladder
$3,500-$11,000 / mo
Launch Online
$100-$149 / hr
Lilo Social
$100-$149/hr
Logical Position
$149-$749/month
Loud Mouth Media
$5,000-$100,000 annually
Mabo
$150-$199 / hr
Merkle
$150–$199 / hr
Metric PPC
$100–$149 / hr
Metric Theory
10%–25% of ad spend
NoGood
$20,000+ / month
Obility
$1,500+ to $5,450+ / month
One 10 Media
$150-$199/hr
OpenMoves
$25-$350 / month
Optimize Your Marketing
$100-$250 per consulting call
PBJ Marketing
$100 - $149 / hr
Peak Ace
$100-$149 / hr
Power Digital
$10,000-$30,000 / month
PPC Geeks
£1,500–£15,000 / mo
Propeller
$25,000 - $50,000 per project
SCUBE Marketing
$2,000+ / month
Search Scientists
$879-$1,649 / mo base fee
Sellozo
$250-$750 / month
SevenAtoms
$5,000-$10,000 / month
The Evergreen Agency
£1,000+ to £4,000+ / month
Tinuiti
$100-$149 / hr
UAM
$799-$1,599/month
Uplifted
$99–$499 / month
Sculpt
$2,000-$50,000/mo
WebMechanix
$150-$199 / hr
WPromote
$150/hr

Frequently asked questions

How many ppc agencies did Top Sales Agencies evaluate?
We currently track 77 independently scored ppc agencies. Each is rated on the same weighted criteria and ranked by overall score.
Which of the ppc agencies ranks highest?
Disruptiveadvertising currently ranks highest with an overall score of 86/100. Across all tracked ppc agencies, scores range from 9 to 86 (average 69).
How are ppc agencies scored?
Each agency is scored on five weighted criteria: Website Presence (20%), Search Visibility (20%), Trust & Credibility (20%), Market Presence (15%), Customer Satisfaction (10%). The overall score is the weighted average of the criteria with available data.
What do ppc agencies typically charge?
Among the ppc agencies with disclosed pricing, common models include Custom monthly retainer delivered through a cross-functional "growth squad" model. NoGood explicitly says engagements are structured as monthly retainers rather than fixed packages, and third-party comparisons describe the retainer as scope- or squad-composition-based., Custom quote agency with a mixed model: most core paid media / performance marketing work appears to be custom-scoped ongoing engagements, while its Data Intelligence & Measurement service is explicitly sold as project-based., Custom quote engagement model with both per-project work and ongoing agency services; public evidence supports project-based pricing for at least some named Hallam products, while third-party directories indicate Hallam also sells larger custom projects and bills by the hour., Custom quote engagements, most likely a mix of per-project work and ongoing monthly retainer work, with hourly-based pricing benchmarks on directories., Custom quote engagements, primarily per-project for website/branding work and ongoing monthly retainer-style digital marketing management; directory data also indicates hourly-based billing is used internally/for quoting., Custom quote for agency engagements, with evidence of project-based and hourly pricing on third-party directories. Croud’s own site positions engagements as flexible full-service or specialist support, which suggests bespoke scoping rather than fixed packages., Custom quote for enterprise performance marketing engagements; evidence suggests a mix of minimum project budget thresholds and, on some directory profiles, hourly-rate-style positioning, but Performics does not publish standard packages or self-serve prices on its own site., Custom quote with pay-per-result / pay-per-goal billing. Leadzai states you only pay when campaigns deliver the defined goal, with goals sold as either clicks or leads; the platform shows a customized cost-per-goal during campaign setup and the buyer chooses a monthly budget based on that rate., Custom quote, primarily a fixed monthly retainer for ongoing performance marketing / paid media management, with some one-off audit/strategy work also offered., Custom quote, primarily monthly retainer engagements for ongoing e-commerce marketing services, with some project-based work and hourly pricing indicated by third-party directories. BlueTuskr positions itself as an extension of the client's team and refers to onboarding and ongoing contracts on its service pages., Custom quote, primarily monthly retainer engagements; white-label work is explicitly described as clearly scoped monthly retainers, with scope-change addenda at a pre-agreed rate. EvenDigit also appears to take smaller fixed-scope projects and may price some services hourly, based on third-party directory profiles., Custom quote, typically a hybrid PPC/demand-gen pricing model: an upfront flat setup fee for the first month (and on at least one page, the first month or two), then an ongoing monthly flat fee plus a percentage of ad spend. They also say fixed monthly pricing may be available when ad spend is predictable. Third-party directories additionally list them as hourly-priced and project-based for directory classification., Custom quote, typically an ongoing monthly agency engagement governed by a Statement of Work, with Brainlabs invoicing monthly in arrears. Engagements appear to center on media planning/buying, analytics/measurement, creative, and SEO/AI visibility work for larger advertisers rather than fixed self-serve packages., Custom quote, typically structured as ongoing monthly agency services/retainer for digital marketing and PPC, with project-based engagements for web development, creative, data, and technology work., Custom quote, with both per-project and ongoing monthly retainer-style engagements. Public evidence points to Aumcore selling full-service digital marketing and web development as scoped engagements rather than fixed self-serve packages; directory profiles consistently show a minimum project budget and hourly-rate bands, while Aumcore's own service pages emphasize tailored strategy, campaign management, optimization, and budget planning., Custom quote; evidence suggests a marketing-agency style mix of monthly service packages/retainers and possibly project-based work, but the exact commercial model for the entity at uam.io could not be confirmed because the domain currently resolves to a GoDaddy for-sale page rather than an operating agency website., Custom-quoted agency engagements, most consistently evidenced as a monthly retainer and/or ongoing managed-services relationship; directory data also indicates hourly-rate positioning, and Tinuiti’s own intake flow suggests engagements are scoped around monthly advertising spend. For media buying specifically, Tinuiti discusses campaign media being bought on CPM or flat-rate impression models, but that describes ad inventory pricing rather than Tinuiti’s agency fee., Custom-quoted agency engagements, most consistently evidenced as monthly retainer work for ongoing PR/marketing services, with project-based work also available. Third-party directory data also shows an hourly-rate framing for some engagements., Custom-quoted agency engagements, most consistently presented by third-party directories as project-based and/or monthly-retainer style work for paid media, email, and SMS management, with hourly-equivalent rate bands published on directories rather than on One 10 Media's own site., Custom-quoted agency engagements, most likely per-project and/or ongoing retainer-based for digital marketing and performance marketing services; exact fee structure is not published. Public evidence shows Amsive sells broad multi-service engagements rather than fixed self-serve plans, and directories indicate a minimum project threshold rather than package pricing., Custom-quoted agency engagements, primarily monthly retainer / ongoing managed-services relationships for digital marketing and media management, with some strategic advisory or project-based work. Evidence from Clutch indicates ongoing monthly spend relationships, while directories consistently show a minimum project budget rather than fixed packages., Custom-quoted agency engagements, primarily monthly retainer / ongoing management for performance marketing, plus one-off project work (e.g. PPC tuneups) and custom-priced training; the agency also sells some training on a per-seat basis for public AI workshops., Custom-quoted agency engagements, primarily monthly retainers for PR and digital marketing/social media work, with hourly billing bands and project minimums also indicated by third-party directories., Custom-quoted agency engagements, typically sold as bespoke website projects and ongoing monthly digital marketing/SEO/PPC management rather than public fixed-price plans. The agency repeatedly describes bespoke solutions, custom designed quotes, SEO/packages, and monthly reporting, which points to a custom quote model with recurring service retainers for ongoing marketing work., Custom-quoted agency pricing, typically structured as a monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing services. KlientBoost’s own site says they provide multiple pricing options tailored to goals, timelines, strategies, and team size; their service pages also explicitly reference common agency models such as flat monthly retainers, percentage of ad spend, and performance-based pricing with a base fee plus bonuses., Custom-quoted B2B advertising engagement, most consistent with ongoing monthly management/retainer work, with some project-based scopes. Dragon360 explicitly says every engagement/program is customized, and client reviews describe ongoing monthly management of digital advertising plus longer-term agency partnerships., Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagement, primarily monthly retainer-based for ongoing SEM/PPC/SEO/CRO work, with at least one public indication of performance-oriented compensation and a short opt-out arrangement rather than a fixed long-term package., Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, most likely monthly retainer and/or scoped ongoing service engagements rather than self-serve plans. Third-party directories also publish an hourly-rate band and minimum project size, suggesting WPromote sells customized agency retainers/projects instead of fixed public packages., Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, most plausibly a monthly retainer and/or ongoing management model for PPC, SEO, Paid Social, Digital PR, CRO, and consultancy. The agency’s own site repeatedly frames services as ongoing campaign management/strategy work and its quote form asks prospects to select a monthly budget, which strongly suggests recurring monthly engagements rather than fixed public packages., Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, most plausibly sold as project-based work and/or ongoing service retainers for SEO, PPC, CRO, digital PR, content, design, and development. Public evidence does not show fixed packages or public self-serve prices; directory listings point to a minimum project budget rather than standardized plans., Custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements, primarily monthly retainer-based and/or ongoing service engagements for PPC, paid social, SEO, CRO, and related marketing services. Public evidence also shows they sell into larger scoped project budgets and describe agency pricing as an ongoing investment rather than fixed packaged plans., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagement, typically an ongoing monthly management/retainer-style partnership for PPC, Paid Social, and/or SEO rather than fixed packages. Mabo explicitly positions itself as flexible and bespoke, with support delivered as standalone services or a wider multi-channel strategy, and emphasizes no fixed-term/long-term contracts., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most consistent with monthly retainer and/or ongoing agency management for PPC, SEO, CRO, paid social, marketing automation, and web work; project-based website engagements are also indicated by directory minimum project sizes., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most likely a mix of monthly retainer and project-based work, with hourly billing benchmarks published on agency directories. Embryo’s own site consistently pushes "Talk to us" / personalised audits rather than fixed packages, while service pages describe ongoing campaign management and monthly reporting., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most plausibly a mix of monthly retainer and ongoing project work; directory listings also indicate they can work on smaller fixed-scope projects and bill at an implied hourly rate., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, most plausibly a monthly retainer/ongoing managed-service model for PPC, paid social, SEO, and related performance marketing work. Public evidence also suggests they may charge a one-time setup/onboarding fee in at least some Google Ads engagements., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, primarily monthly/ongoing service relationships for PPC, SEO, paid media, CRO, content, and related strategy/execution work; also project-based scopes are evident from directory/review data., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, with evidence of both ongoing monthly/retainer-style work and one-off project/strategy work. Positioning on Clutch emphasizes a "B2B Google Ads Consultancy - One Time Strategy," while client reviews also show ongoing PPC, social media, email, SEO, and web work., Custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, with strong evidence of a monthly retainer / monthly management-fee model for retained services; they also appear to take project-based work and can bill hourly for some scopes., Custom-quoted growth marketing engagements that appear to be primarily monthly retainer-based, with some project-based work and possible hourly billing references on directories. Power Digital positions itself as a full-service strategic partner across media, SEO, social, creative, CRO, analytics, consulting, and data infrastructure rather than publishing fixed packages on its own site., Custom-quoted monthly agency retainer that is commonly billed as a percentage of managed ad spend. Multiple third-party sources indicate Metric Theory engagements are typically ongoing retainers for PPC / paid social management rather than fixed-price packages., Custom-quoted monthly PPC management on a fixed-fee retainer, with month-to-month billing and no long-term contract. PPC Geeks explicitly says it bills a fixed monthly fee rather than taking a cut of profits, and third-party directory/review sources indicate engagements commonly start around a recurring monthly management fee., Custom-quoted monthly retainer / ongoing agency engagement for full-funnel ecommerce growth and retention services, with some projects also scoped as larger engagements. The company describes partnerships as "full-funnel engagements" and a careers page references "monthly retainer deliverables," indicating recurring-retainer billing rather than pay-per-lead or pay-per-appointment., Custom-quoted monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing services (SEO, PPC, paid social), with some project-based/audit work. Dark Horse’s own site pushes a free audit and then a tailored scope; third-party directories/reviews indicate ongoing monthly engagements and also list project minimums/hourly bands., Custom-quoted monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing/advertising management, with contracts defining a maximum monthly fee; may also include media markup. Third-party directories also list project-based minimums and hourly rate bands., Custom-quoted monthly retainer for PPC/SEO engagements, with evidence of ongoing management fees and directory-listed hourly/minimum-project bands. Clutch also lists a packaged PPC offering starting monthly, so the public evidence points to retainer-based ongoing engagements rather than pay-per-lead or pay-per-appointment., Custom-quoted ongoing PPC / paid media management engagement, most consistent with a monthly retainer or ongoing service relationship rather than fixed public packages. Black Propeller describes a consultation -> audit & proposal -> partnership process and personalized strategy/management, while third-party directories also list hourly-rate bands and minimum project budgets., Custom-quoted PPC agency engagement, most likely ongoing monthly management/retainer rather than fixed packages. Metric PPC describes campaigns as custom-tailored, discusses monthly budgets, monthly reporting, and ongoing optimization/account management; for its Hulu/CTV offering (Metric+) it explicitly says clients choose monthly budgets and there is no long-term commitment., Custom-quoted PPC agency pricing, primarily monthly management engagements; Hanapin’s own materials also describe retainer-based support, project-by-project work, PPC audits, and contracts for a specific number of hours per month., Custom-quoted PPC management engagement, most consistently evidenced as ongoing monthly management/retainer-style work rather than fixed packages. Public directory profiles also show hourly-rate bands and minimum project budgets, but Excella PPC's own site does not publish standard plans or package pricing., Flat-fee monthly SaaS subscription for Amazon PPC automation, with a custom-quoted managed/full-management option also billed monthly., Hybrid custom pricing. Sculpt sells primarily on flat monthly retainers for ongoing B2B social media work, with separate project fees for consulting and one-off campaigns. Within retainers, they use a Content Unit-based scoping model for content production, and some services are sold as bounded monthly ranges or single-campaign packages., Hybrid monthly retainer + percentage of ad spend for PPC management; custom quote for larger spend levels. Search Scientists publicly sells ongoing PPC management on a monthly basis, with pricing tied to both a fixed base fee and a variable percentage of monthly ad spend., Hybrid monthly retainer pricing with named packages plus add-ons: a month-to-month hourly-support package (Guide), an annual paid-media retainer package for startups (Ascent), a custom/tiered annual growth package tied to media spend (Summit), and separately priced add-ons/projects for SEO/GEO, dashboards, content, and marketing operations., Hybrid monthly retainer tied to ad spend, with custom quotes. G2 states ADM uses a standard agency model charging the greater of 12% of ad spend or a $5,000 monthly minimum; the company’s own site indicates engagements are scoped around ongoing monthly marketing budgets rather than fixed public packages., Hybrid offering: (1) custom-quoted digital marketing agency engagements that appear to be billed as monthly retainer and/or project-based work, and (2) a separate SaaS email marketing product (OpenMoves OM3) sold on subscription tiers with optional full-service add-ons., Hybrid pricing. CIENCE GO Digital appears to be sold as part of a broader graph8/CIENCE platform subscription for programmatic advertising, with CPM-based media buying and a monthly platform/managed-services fee. Evidence also shows custom-quoted managed engagements and directory-listed hourly/minimum-budget bands for the agency overall., Hybrid. Convertics publicly shows two pricing approaches: (1) custom-quoted agency services for performance/growth marketing, ecommerce growth marketing, lead generation, CRO, and PPC; and (2) a published monthly subscription for its 'Ecommerce Automated Marketing' platform, billed per month with separate required ad spend minimums., Monthly PPC management retainer priced as a percentage of monthly ad spend, plus a one-time setup fee; custom quote. The agency separates media spend (paid directly to the ad platform) from Falcon's management fee., Monthly retainer / ongoing monthly service, with three custom-quoted engagement types: standalone single-channel Growth services, Growth retainers, and senior-led Growth partnerships., Monthly retainer with tiered demand-generation packages and custom quotes; packages are differentiated by scope and by whether the Demand Gen Manager is US-based or MX-based., Primarily a custom monthly flat-fee retainer for ongoing digital marketing management, with service-specific monthly tiers published on HawkSEM pages. HawkSEM also publicly says PPC agencies may use percentage-of-ad-spend, performance-based, or hybrid pricing, but HawkSEM states it prefers a flat monthly management fee. Some services are offered month-to-month, and Amazon PPC also mentions optional short-term 1- or 2-month engagements., Primarily a custom monthly retainer agency, with one publicly priced startup package. Directive also sells at least one low-ticket self-serve digital course. Third-party directories/review aggregators suggest custom engagements can also be discussed in project-budget terms, but the agency’s own site frames the managed-services offer as ongoing monthly billing., Primarily a monthly retainer-based, full-service growth marketing agency engagement; Ladder also currently markets itself as offering "performance pricing," but no public formula or per-lead/per-meeting rate was found. Engagements appear custom-quoted rather than sold as fixed public plans., Primarily custom monthly retainer pricing for PPC, SEO, social media marketing, and design/development, with service-specific starting prices published on a third-party pricing profile. The agency’s own site says engagements are custom-built after a discovery call rather than sold as fixed packages., Primarily custom-quote B2B agency engagements for media, creative, data, cloud, and CRM services; publicly visible fixed pricing exists for Jellyfish Training as per-seat course purchases, with many 1-day courses sold individually and private team sessions quoted separately., Primarily custom-quoted agency engagements with monthly billing/retainer-style management fees, plus hourly billing signals from directories. Peak Ace also publishes a packaged SMB offer (“Peak Ace Go”) that appears to charge a management fee equal to 15% of ad budget, with extra monthly fees for additional markets/languages., Primarily custom-quoted agency engagements: per-project for website/design/development work, ongoing monthly retainer for digital marketing/performance services, and at least one named always-on growth retainer product (Gravity AI)., Primarily custom-quoted digital marketing engagements, likely structured as ongoing monthly/retainer-style agency services for channels like affiliate, Amazon/marketplaces, paid media, SEO/GEO, email, and related consulting. eAccountable also publicly offers at least one standalone performance-based service: Amazon Revenue Recovery, billed purely as a commission on recovered funds., Primarily custom-quoted enterprise services engagements, with evidence of per-project and hourly billing on agency directories. For Merkle’s own CXM/Data Accelerator productized offering, the pricing model is usage-based/pay-as-you-go based on implemented modules and data volume., Primarily custom-quoted monthly retainer for ongoing digital marketing (SEO, PPC, creative/content), with evidence of month-to-month contracts; web development is also sold as hourly, monthly retainer, or project-based., Primarily flat-rate subscription pricing tied to the advertiser's last month's ad spend, usually billed upfront for 6-month terms. Karooya also sells add-on automation modules and some done-for-you services with custom quotes or stated starting monthly fees., Primarily monthly management fees for digital marketing services, priced either as a flat monthly retainer at lower spend tiers or as a percentage of monthly ad spend at higher tiers. Contract pricing changes by term length (6, 12, or 18 months), with discounts for longer commitments. They also publish some fixed-fee offerings such as a $499 one-time SEO technical audit, $149/month local listing management, small-business website packages with setup fee + monthly payments, and hourly creative/video editing add-ons., Primarily monthly package/retainer pricing for ongoing digital marketing services, with tiered service packages published for PPC, SEO, social media marketing, and email marketing. Clutch and Effeect’s own package pages indicate fixed monthly plans rather than pay-per-lead or pay-per-appointment pricing., Primarily monthly retainer pricing for digital marketing services, with custom quotes by service line; also offers one-time project pricing for web design/development. The site explicitly says engagements are month-to-month and backed by a written performance guarantee, while PPC is billed as a monthly fee plus ad spend., Primarily monthly retainer pricing for ongoing digital marketing/creative services, plus custom-quote PPC management tied to monthly ad spend, plus some fixed-fee ancillary services and per-feed/per-SKU pricing for feed management., Self-serve monthly SaaS subscription, with tiered plans published on Uplifted’s own pricing page; also described in the FAQ as customized by team size and asset requirements for quote-based sales conversations.. Disclosed ranges include 3Q/DEPT ($300,000-$700,000 / month); Accelerated Digital Media ($5,000+ / month); AdVenture Media Group ($100 - $149 / hr); Amsive ($25,000-$50,000 minimum budget); Aumcore ($50-$149 / hr); Bastion Agency ($5,500-$10,000 / month); Bastion Elevate ($5,500-$10,000 / month); Bind Media ($150-$199 / hr); Black Propeller ($100-$149 / hr); BlueTuskr ($100-$149 / hr); Boundify ($2,000-$8,000/mo); Cardinal Digital Marketing ($3,000-$15,000/month); Climb Online ($100 - $149 / hr); Convertics (EU$ 69–99 / month); Croud ($10,000 to over $100,000 per project); Dark Horse (£2,500 / month); Digital Drew SEM ($750-$1,000 / mo); Digital Position ($1,500-$4,000 / mo); Directiveconsulting ($6,500/mo and up); DiscoverMyBusiness ($2,500-$25,000 / month); Disruptiveadvertising ($100-$149 / hr); Dragon360 ($30,000/month to $200,000/year); eAccountable ($5,000-$20,000+ / month); Effeect ($800-$3,000/month); Elevato ($150-$199/hr); Elite SEM ($100-$149/hr); Embryo ($100-$149 / hr); EvenDigit (< $25/hr); Evolved Search ($1,000+ per project); Excella PPC ($10,000-$49,999 typical project spend); Flycast Media ($1,000-$10,000); Gatorworks ($10,000-$49,999 per project); Global Search Marketing ($100-$149 / hr); CIENCE GO Digital ($499/mo-$2,499/mo); Hallam (£2,000-£5,680 per project); Hanapin Marketing ($100–$149 / hr); HawkSEM ($1,200-$10,000+ / mo); Impression ($150-$199 / hr); Jellyfish ($495-$1,099 ex tax per course seat); JumpFly ($250-$350 / mo); Karooya ($300-$3,000 / 6 months); Klientboost ($100-$149 / hr); Ladder ($3,500-$11,000 / mo); Launch Online ($100-$149 / hr); Lilo Social ($100-$149/hr); Logical Position ($149-$749/month); Loud Mouth Media ($5,000-$100,000 annually); Mabo ($150-$199 / hr); Merkle ($150–$199 / hr); Metric PPC ($100–$149 / hr); Metric Theory (10%–25% of ad spend); NoGood ($20,000+ / month); Obility ($1,500+ to $5,450+ / month); One 10 Media ($150-$199/hr); OpenMoves ($25-$350 / month); Optimize Your Marketing ($100-$250 per consulting call); PBJ Marketing ($100 - $149 / hr); Peak Ace ($100-$149 / hr); Power Digital ($10,000-$30,000 / month); PPC Geeks (£1,500–£15,000 / mo); Propeller ($25,000 - $50,000 per project); SCUBE Marketing ($2,000+ / month); Search Scientists ($879-$1,649 / mo base fee); Sellozo ($250-$750 / month); SevenAtoms ($5,000-$10,000 / month); The Evergreen Agency (£1,000+ to £4,000+ / month); Tinuiti ($100-$149 / hr); UAM ($799-$1,599/month); Uplifted ($99–$499 / month); Sculpt ($2,000-$50,000/mo); WebMechanix ($150-$199 / hr); WPromote ($150/hr).