Most agencies have never
built anything.
We have. That is not a positioning statement. It is the reason everything we do is different from every agency you have worked with before.
“We’ve never actually run a business. We don’t know what it feels like to watch revenue drop and not know why. We haven’t sat with a team at the end of a hard month trying to figure out how to cover payroll. But we have a great deck and our client’s Instagram is growing.”
No agency says that. But for most of them, it is true.
PowerPlay was built because someone spent more than a decade on the other side of that equation — and got tired of watching good business owners pay for theory when what they needed was proof.
Where it started — and what it actually taught me
I started my career as a civil servant at the Central Bureau of Statistics, trained in statistical computing. Data was my first language — not a tool I picked up later, but the foundation of how I think. I resigned early because I was not built to sit still.
My first private sector role was selling luxury goods to markets in North America, Europe, Mexico, and Japan. Because of my background I could code, so I built the website myself and connected it directly to the sales process.
By the second month we were doing USD 40,000. That result taught me something I have never forgotten: when data thinking, technical execution, and business strategy work together in one person, the output is different from what you get when those things live in three separate departments.
That combination — statistics, code, creativity, and obsession with revenue — became the thing I brought to every business I touched after that. It is still what PowerPlay brings to every client today.
What was built — the actual record
From there I kept building. Not as an advisor. Not as a consultant. As the person responsible for the revenue number at the end of the month.
Then I moved to Timor Leste to manage a full business group — four restaurants, three MICE venues, a hotel, a resort, a villa, and a real estate operation. I came back to Indonesia for business training through Gratyo.
Each of these was a different business with different economics, different customers, different competitive dynamics. The thing that stayed constant was the approach: understand the revenue model first, build the marketing system around it second, and measure everything that can be measured.
The turnaround nobody else wanted to take
When I returned to Bandung, I was called by the new owner of the same restaurant I had originally built from zero. It had collapsed.
Revenue gone. Reviews damaged. Brand in disrepair. 250 million rupiah in debt accumulated in just a few months of mismanagement.
I went in and fixed it. The debt was cleared. The restaurant filled up again. On special occasions the waiting list returned. The team received full THR. We all took a day off together — something that had never happened before under that roof.
That last detail matters more than the revenue number. A business that pays its people, gives them rest, and treats them as the asset they actually are — that is the standard I hold every business I touch to. Including PowerPlay itself.
The moment everything became clear
Then came the moment that changed what I was going to do with the rest of my career.
Over a purchasing miscalculation in the supply chain — something I had nothing to do with — everything I had built was dismissed. The years of work. The turnaround. The results. The team. None of it counted. I was made to feel like the problem rather than the reason the business was still standing.
What I felt was not only anger. What I felt, more than anything, was clarity.
Because I looked at the team around me — the people who had shown up every single day, who had learned alongside me, who had bet on me and on what we were building when they didn't have to — and something became very simple.
These people deserved better.
We all did.
We deserved a place where what we built was actually measured. Where our work meant something real. Where the people doing the work were treated as the asset they actually are.
"So I said to them: let's build our own world. A world where we are valued, and where we actually change things for the people who need us."
The decision that became PowerPlay
PowerPlay did not begin as a business plan. It began as a decision made by a group of people who chose each other.
My team did not come because of a job offer. They came because they had watched me work and they believed in what we could build together. They left stability for something unproven because they trusted where we were going. That is not something I take lightly.
My most important job at PowerPlay — more important than any client result — is to become the kind of leader who makes them better than I am. If one day they build something that surpasses what I've done, that is the day I will know we did this right.
That accountability — to the team, to the work, to the outcome — is not separate from how we serve clients. It is the same thing. It comes from the same place.
We do not accept engagements
we cannot win.
We do not produce work we are not willing to defend. And we do not stay in relationships — with clients or with anyone — where what we build is not valued.
This is not a brand promise. It is the operational reality of who we are and where we came from. When PowerPlay takes on a client, we are genuinely invested in the outcome — because our reputation is built entirely on results, not reports.
PowerPlay is not for everyone.
Here is how to know if it is for you.
Most agencies want to say yes to everyone. We have learned that saying yes to the wrong client is a failure for both sides. Ask yourself these questions honestly.
Do you see marketing as an investment with an expected return — or as a cost you're hoping will somehow pay off?
When you make business decisions, do you start with data — or do you start with instinct and look for data to confirm it?
Do the people around you — your team, your suppliers, your partners — feel like people you are building something with?
In ten years, do you want to look back at a business that made money — or a business that meant something?
We will work hard for you, hold ourselves accountable to your revenue, and bring everything we have built and learned to your business.
"If your honest answers are different, we are not the right fit. We will tell you that clearly, in the first conversation, without making it awkward. We would rather lose a prospect than disappoint a client."
A diagnosis before a proposal.
A system before a campaign.
The difference matters. A campaign is a single push designed to create a short-term result. A system is a structure where every element connects to every other element and works together to create predictable revenue over time.
Before we recommend anything, we need to understand your business — your revenue, your margins, your customer behavior, what you've already tried, what it produced, and what you actually need right now. Every engagement starts here. No exceptions.
Free revenue auditSpecific, measurable revenue targets agreed in writing before any work begins. Not after. Not "we'll figure it out as we go." Before. This is the contract that makes everything else credible.
Targets firstWe bring the full range of what we know: data analysis and interpretation, technical execution across platforms, creative direction rooted in brand strategy, and the operational perspective of people who have actually run the businesses we are helping grow.
Integrated executionAt the end of every engagement, the question is not whether we produced what we said we would produce. The question is whether your business grew. That is the commitment PowerPlay makes. And we only make it when we believe we can keep it.
Revenue accountability
They didn't come for a job offer.
They came because they believed
in what we could build together.
When I built PowerPlay, I didn't build it alone. I built it with a team of people who had watched me work, who chose to leave stable employment to build something real with me, and who show up every day not because they have to but because they believe in what we're doing.
My most important job — more important than any client result — is making sure they become better than me. Not just as marketers. As builders. As people who understand what it takes to grow a business because they have done it themselves, alongside someone who has done it for more than a decade.
If they surpass what I've done, PowerPlay worked. That accountability is not separate from how we serve clients. It is the same thing. It comes from the same place.
The PowerPlay commitment — in writing, before we start
PowerPlay is built around a different contract from every agency you have worked with before. We measure one thing: did your revenue grow?
Everything else — the content, the campaigns, the brand work, the data systems — is in service of that number. If it doesn't connect to revenue, we question whether it should exist at all.
These are not values statements. They are operational standards we are held accountable to in every engagement.
Specific, measurable revenue targets are documented and agreed by both parties before any work begins and before any invoice is sent.
If any campaign is not tracking toward its agreed target, you receive a written diagnosis and revised plan within 72 hours. You never discover a problem before we do.
If we are significantly below agreed targets at day 60, we extend our work at no additional cost until targets are reached or we mutually revise based on new data.
Every asset — all passwords, ad accounts, creative files, analytics — belongs to you from the moment it is created. If our relationship ends, you leave with everything.
If this is the kind of
partner you've been
looking for —
we should talk.
Start with a free revenue audit. No pitch. No pressure. Just an honest conversation about your business and what it would genuinely take to grow it.
We take on a limited number of new clients each quarter.
If we don't believe we can genuinely help your business, we'll tell you in the audit.