Hold up. Before you hand over a chunk of cash to anyone promising to double your revenue, let's be clear on one thing: doubling revenue rather than profit can be the quickest way to sink the ship if you're not careful.
First question: Do you actually know what's working for your business right now? If most of your customers come through word of mouth and you're about to drop $50K on Facebook ads, you're potentially burning money. Do you know your current customer acquisition cost? Their lifetime value? Without these numbers, you're guessing - and an expensive agency won't fix that.
Second: Can you handle double the revenue? Sounds like a weird question, but I've seen businesses break under rapid growth. Do you have the systems, the people, the cash flow to deliver if this agency actually delivers on their promise? Growth that outpaces your operational capacity is a recipe for disappointed customers and burnt-out teams.
Third: What's the agency actually promising to do? "Double your revenue" is a nice headline, but how? Through what channels? Based on what assumptions about your market? Get specific. Get evidence. Get references you can actually call.
Here's the thing about marketing: its job isn't to double your revenue. Marketing exposes your business to potential customers and generates leads. It's the role of sales to capitalise on that marketing. You need both working together. Every industry and each business is unique - a business that relies on low margin, high volume might need to spend more in marketing to drive volume. If you're low volume and high margin, it's likely a more intimate relationship with your customer. I'd hope the marketing agency you're talking to is interested in understanding who you are, what your brand is about, how you make money and what an ideal customer looks like.
Here's what I'd actually do: Go through your existing customers and develop some personas. Which of them do you derive the most value from, both financially and for satisfaction? Where will you find more of them? Then run some small experiments, advertising in a variety of ways where that type of person spends their time. In parallel to this, perhaps run a small general online campaign and evaluate the two. Learn what resonates with your best customers before committing big money. If you need help working through this decision or testing what actually works for your business, we can help you figure that out before you commit to big agency dollars.