Budget in, booked jobs out.
An ads manager that builds the campaigns, writes the ads, wires up the tracking and reports in jobs, not jargon. You set the spend, it goes straight to Meta and Google, and nothing runs until you approve it.
You say the goal. It builds the machine.
“More boiler services this month” is a brief. The ads manager turns it into the whole machine: the offer, the ad copy and images, the lead form or landing page, the targeting for your patch. Meta from day one, Google too on the top plan.
Your money, your rules.
The old agency model buries a margin inside your ad spend. Here the numbers stay clean: you pay the platforms directly at whatever budget you set, Webnua's fee is flat, and every ad shows you exactly what it says and costs before it goes anywhere.
Not clicks. Jobs.
Agencies report impressions and clicks because it hides whether anything worked. Here every ad lead lands in the same inbox as the rest of your enquiries and gets followed through quote, acceptance and invoice. You see what a booked job cost, per campaign.
Ads multiply a good site. They can't rescue a bad one.
Paying for clicks into a site that doesn't convert is how ad budgets die. That's why the ladder works the way it does: site first, reviews and content building trust, ads when there's something worth sending traffic to. If you're not there yet, we'll say so.
Where it sits on the ladder.
Ad spend is separate and goes directly to the platforms at whatever budget you set. Full pricing →
First the site. Then pour on the fuel.
See your website free in the next minute. Ads plug in whenever you're ready.