Why International Expansion Agencies Are Paid to Say Yes

Why do expansion agencies always recommend expanding?

> Most international agencies are paid to launch markets, so their incentive is to say yes to every market and every channel. Rhetica’s point is that a good partner is willing to tell you to wait, sequence, or exit, because the honest answer is often not “expand now.” Watch the incentive: advice that always concludes “yes, expand” is selling, not advising.

Rhetica is a B2B international-expansion and DTC growth consultancy that builds and operates new-market revenue.

Every international expansion agency you’ll meet has a revenue model that pays them more when you enter more markets. That’s not bad faith. That’s structural. It means you cannot trust their answer to “should we enter Germany?” until you understand the bias baked into their business model.

A genuine neutral diagnosis means the advisor gets paid the same whether the verdict is Green, Yellow, or Red. That setup is almost absent in this space. Here’s why, and how to screen for it.

Why This Problem Is Bigger Than You Think

Most founders treat agency choice as a vendor decision. It isn’t. It is a decision structure problem.

When you hire an expansion partner before deciding whether to expand, you’ve handed the question to someone who earns more if you say yes. The outcome isn’t always wrong. But the process is corrupt before it starts.

Here’s what actually happens: a $9M DTC brand hires a bundled execution agency to “evaluate” three markets. The agency returns with a 40-slide deck recommending Germany, the Netherlands, and Japan.

The sequencing rationale is thin. The year-1 unit economics by country are missing entirely. There is no payback by market model. There is no Red verdict in the deck.

The brand launches all three at once. Eighteen months in, 74% of their revenue is in Germany alone.

The Netherlands is at breakeven. Japan is bleeding cash. The agency is still on retainer.

This is not a story about one bad agency. It is the expected output of a category where the incentive points in one direction: more markets, more spend, more retainer.

The Bias Map: How Each Player’s Pricing Creates the Problem

The bias is not uniform. It takes a different shape per business model. Each one produces a different distortion.

Bundled Execution Agencies

These are the firms that handle strategy, creative, paid media, and market entry under one roof. Their retainer scales with market count. Managing three markets costs more than managing one.

Recommending three markets instead of one isn’t just an opinion. It’s a revenue uplift.

The structural mechanism: retainer contracts are written per market. A three-market brief generates three line items. The moment the consultant recommends Red on Germany, they lose that line item.

Issue three Red verdicts and the engagement is over. Kill criteria end retainers. That is the exact conflict the bundled model cannot resolve.

They will never say: “Enter Germany only. Wait 12 months. Then evaluate.” That sentence is worth less revenue than: “Enter Germany, the UK, and Australia together. We’ll handle all three.”

Cross-Border SaaS Platforms

Shopify Markets, Global-e, ESW, Flow. These are the plumbing layer. They earn a percentage of GMV flowing through their system.

More markets means more volume means more revenue. Their fee scales directly with market count.

They will show you the plumbing. They will never show you whether the plumbing is worth installing. A cross-border SaaS platform has no reason to tell you Japan’s order value drops 30% after duties.

They won’t tell you that breaks your AOV-to-CAC math. They just need you to flip the switch.

Localization Platforms

Smartling, Phrase, Lokalise. Paid per word, per language, per market. A five-market launch is five times more revenue than a one-market launch.

The mechanism is per-word billing. A 5,000-word store, localized into Japanese, Korean, and Mandarin, generates 15,000 billable words. The right advice is “sequence: localize German first, prove unit economics, then translate.” That advice cuts billable volume by two-thirds. Their model disappears if they give it.

They also have no reason to push back on order. More markets now means more revenue now. That you will burn your own team’s bandwidth entering Korea before Germany is stable is not their problem.

LinkedIn Solo Consultants

Paid per call, per hour, per month. Their model depends on you keeping them on. Saying “wait six months” ends the contract. That advice costs them the client.

The result: they fill the time with activity. Market research decks. Competitor teardowns. Trend reports.

All of it is real work. None of it produces a market verdict backed by unit economics.

Brand Strategy Consultancies

The large brand shops charge by project scope. Scope grows when market count grows. A four-market brief costs more than a one-market brief, full stop.

The incentive is not to get you into the right market. It is to build a project large enough to justify their fees.

The Bias Map, Summarized

The Bias Map, Summarized
The Bias Map, Summarized
Player TypeRevenue DriverStructural BiasWhat They Won’t Say
Bundled execution agencyRetainer scales with market countPush 3-5 markets“Enter one, not three”
Cross-border SaaSGMV percentageMaximum volume“Your AOV math breaks here”
Localization platformPer word / per languageMore markets now“Sequence before you translate”
LinkedIn consultantPer engagementNever end the engagement“Wait six months”
Brand consultancyProject scopeBigger scope = bigger fee“Narrow the brief”

Not one of these players has a model that rewards a Red verdict. The advice you get reflects their incentive. Not the quality of the analysis.

The Neutral-Intermediary Alternative

Neutral diagnosis means one thing: the advisor is paid the same regardless of the verdict.

Green (enter). Yellow (wait, here’s what needs to be true first). Red (skip, here’s the math that says so).

Same fee. Same level of service. No downstream revenue tied to which markets you enter or which platforms you use.

This is the only setup that gives a CFO an answer they can trust.

The neutral intermediary charges for the diagnosis, not the execution. It delivers a market verdict: Green, Yellow, or Red. That verdict is backed by the Contribution Margin Waterfall, the True CAC Formula, and a payback by market model.

What a Contribution Margin Waterfall Actually Looks Like

The framework named in this article is not abstract. Here is how it runs for a premium skincare brand (anonymized, DTC, $8M revenue) evaluating Germany as Market 2:

What a Contribution Margin Waterfall Actually Looks Like
What a Contribution Margin Waterfall Actually Looks Like
Line ItemPer-Order AmountNotes
Revenue (AOV)$114Blended average order value
Duties + import fees-$17DE/EU: 6.5% average duty rate
Local payment processing-$4Klarna surcharge + currency conversion
Returns + restocking-$14DE return rate 28%, vs. domestic 11%
Logistics (DHL Parcel EU)-$11Landed cost to German address
Gross margin after fulfillment$68
Blended marketing (Meta DE + Google)-$51First-year CAC at target volume
Contribution margin per order$17
Payback period (subscription cohort)11 monthsGreen threshold: under 18 months

Verdict: Green. The payback is under 18 months. The return rate headwind is real but absorbed. Germany qualifies for launch.

Run the same model on a second candidate market, Japan, for the same brand:

What a Contribution Margin Waterfall Actually Looks Like
What a Contribution Margin Waterfall Actually Looks Like
Line ItemPer-Order AmountNotes
Revenue (AOV)$114Same product, same price point
Duties + import taxes-$22JP: cosmetics attract 5.8% + consumption tax
Local payment processing-$7Konbini payment rails + currency conversion
Returns + restocking-$6JP return rate low (4%), but repack cost high
Logistics (Japan Post EMS)-$19Landed cost, express required for cosmetics
Gross margin after fulfillment$60
Blended marketing (Yahoo! JP + Meta JP)-$74First-year CAC at target volume
Contribution margin per order-$14
Payback periodNever (negative CM)Red threshold: negative CM at year-1 CAC

Verdict: Red. Japan’s CAC at any realistic entry volume runs above contribution margin.

The cross-border SaaS platform recommended Japan. The localization vendor quoted Japanese translation. Neither ran this model. Neither was paid to run it.

The work takes weeks, not months. The deliverable is the answer to a decision that could cost $50,000 to $500,000 if it goes wrong.

If your agency’s bonus structure rewards markets-launched, they’re not your strategist. They’re your sales pipeline.

Why Most Agencies Can’t Offer This

The structural reason is simple. Execution agencies need execution revenue. The moment they issue a Red verdict on Germany, they lose the German retainer.

Issue three Red verdicts and the engagement is over. That does not work when your revenue comes from managing campaigns.

This is not an ethics problem. It is a design problem.

A neutral advisor must split diagnostic fees from execution fees. The firm that tells you whether to enter cannot be the firm that profits when you enter. Those two roles are in direct conflict.

Most agencies avoid this because it means walking away from execution fees. That’s where real margin lives. The review work is thin-margin, high-trust. Most agencies aren’t built around it.

There is also a skills gap. A real market verdict requires someone who owned the P&L on international launches. Not someone who ran campaigns for the person who owned it.

There is a real gap between “I ran paid media on 12 international launches” and “I owned the P&L on 12 launches.” The second gives better answers. It is also rarer.

If You’re Already In a Market: SCALE / FIX / MILK / EXIT

Most of this article is written for the pre-hire moment. But the same diagnostic applies to markets you’re already running.

The question shifts from “should we enter?” to “what do we do with what we have?” That decision has four possible verdicts:

SCALE — The market has positive contribution margin and payback under 18 months. The unit economics work. The bottleneck is investment, not fundamentals. Put more in.

FIX — The market has negative contribution margin but a known cause: returns too high, logistics provider wrong, CAC target off for the category, pricing not localized. The fundamentals can work. Fix the lever, reforecast, then reassess.

MILK — The market makes cash at current spend but will not scale. CAC climbs faster than LTV as you push volume. Run it for margin, do not grow it.

EXIT — The unit economics are broken and the fix is not clear. Cut the market. Move the team and budget to markets that are working.

The same Contribution Margin Waterfall that diagnoses a pre-entry decision diagnoses a live market. The framework is the same. The inputs already exist. You are running them whether you know it or not — the question is whether you’re running them deliberately.

A neutral partner shows you how to choose, sequence, and exit markets honestly. It also assesses the four global growth profiles a real partner would assess first.

How to Hire a Neutral Expansion Partner: 5 Questions

You cannot detect bias by looking at a credentials page. Ask these questions early, before any proposal.

1. “Walk me through a recent engagement where you recommended against entering a market. What happened to the engagement after?”

A neutral partner will have this story ready. A biased one will struggle to name a case. Or they will reframe it so the client entered anyway.

2. “How does your fee change if the verdict is skip-this-market?”

The answer should be: it doesn’t. If the fee changes, the incentive changes. A flat fee is the only structure that keeps the analysis honest.

3. “Do you have any downstream revenue tied to which markets we enter?”

This catches agencies with revenue-share deals on tech platforms, referral fees from localization vendors, or kickbacks from in-market partners. Any downstream revenue creates a bias. It does not have to be large to corrupt the analysis.

4. “Can you show me your Contribution Margin Waterfall template?”

A real expansion analyst has a working model. It starts at revenue. Then it deducts duties, local payment fees, returns, logistics, and marketing spend. The output is contribution margin per geography.

If they hand you a revenue projection without this structure, it is not a model. It is a guess.

5. “What is your payback model per geography, and what is your threshold for recommending against entry?”

Neutral diagnosis needs a defined threshold. For example: “If payback by market exceeds 18 months, the verdict defaults to Red.” If your partner has no set threshold, they are making judgment calls. Those are easy to bias.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is a neutral diagnostician different from a typical expansion consultant?

A typical expansion consultant is paid for time and output. Their incentive is to keep the contract running.

A neutral diagnostician is paid for a verdict. The fee is fixed no matter what the verdict says. That structure is what makes the answer trustworthy.

Isn’t the risk that a neutral advisor just says no to everything?

The real risk runs the other way. Agencies with execution revenue downstream have every incentive to say yes.

A neutral diagnostician has no skin in the execution. They have no reason to push you either direction. Their reputation is built on accuracy, not on market count.

What does the neutral diagnosis actually deliver?

A single output document: the Market Verdict Sheet. Here is what it looks like for a three-market review:

What does the neutral diagnosis actually deliver?
What does the neutral diagnosis actually deliver?
MarketVerdictCM per OrderPaybackDecision Trigger
GermanyGreen+$1711 monthsLaunch Q1
NetherlandsYellow+$822 monthsWait: fix returns rate first
JapanRed-$14NeverStructurally broken at entry CAC

Attached to each row: the full Contribution Margin Waterfall, the True CAC model at three spend scenarios, and the specific condition that would flip a Yellow to Green (or a Green to Yellow).

This is the document your CFO uses to sign off. It is also the document a biased agency will never produce, because two of the three rows here are not entries.

We’ve already entered a market and it’s not working. Can this help now?

Yes. The same Contribution Margin Waterfall applies to live markets. The SCALE / FIX / MILK / EXIT framework (covered in the section above) runs on the same inputs.

The question is not whether to enter. It is which lever to pull now.

Can you do this for B2B SaaS as well?

Yes, with scope adjusted for the CAC model and sales cycle. The structure is the same. The inputs differ.

The Only Question That Matters

You are about to make a decision worth five to seven figures. The agency sitting across from you has a revenue model. That model is pointed in a direction.

The question is not whether your expansion partner is good at their job. The question is whether their business model allows them to tell you the truth.

Run the free Rhetica Margin Diagnostic at tool.rhetica.com before you spend a dollar on execution.


Author: Aliyan Ahmed, Founder of Rhetica. 12 DTC brands personally launched into new markets. $105M+ in international revenue across 60+ countries. Operator, not advisor.

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