The mental trap that cost me ā¬1200
Last summer, I spent around ā¬1200 on Google Ads before realizing I made a very basic mistake. At that point, I decided to ādo it properlyā and bring in a specialist instead of figuring everything out myself. So I found a guy on Fiverr, good reviews, confident positioning, clearly experienced. It felt like the logical next step ā let someone who knows the system handle it better than I could. I stepped back and let it run. Two months later, around ā¬1200 spent⦠and zero sales. Traffic was coming in, clicks were there, but nothing actually converted. And this is where it became uncomfortable. I realized I had no real visibility into what was being tested, what assumptions were made, or why certain decisions were taken. I basically outsourced not just execution, but understanding. So I stopped it. Not because Google Ads donāt work, but because I wasnāt in control of the system behind them. Instead, I shifted back to what I could actually see and influence directly ā email marketing and organic traffic, mostly through AI-driven content and SEO. And thatās where things started moving again. Looking back, the mistake wasnāt spending ā¬1200. It was trying to skip the part where I actually understand how things work before handing them over. Now I approach it very differently: understand first, then scale. Curious ā have you ever outsourced something thinking it would save time⦠and ended up losing both time and money instead?