How Abhinav Reddy Started His Digital Marketing Career at Impact Digital Marketing Institute — A Beginner's Story
This story was written by the student in their own words. Results shown are based on this student's individual effort and experience. Outcomes may vary.
I Almost Did Not Join
I will be honest from the first line — I spent almost three months going in circles before I enrolled at Impact Digital Marketing Institute. Not because I was being careful. Because I was scared of wasting money on something that would not work, and because I had already tried one thing that did not work. That will make more sense in a minute.
This is not a review written to convince you. It is just what happened to me, in the order it happened, including the part where I nearly stopped in the middle of the course.
Who I Was Before All of This
I completed my B.Com from a college in Hyderabad in mid-2023. Nothing special about my academic record — I passed, that is about it. After college, I spent about eight months doing data entry work for a small trading firm near Begumpet. The salary was ₹12,000 a month. The work was not hard, it was just... empty. I was typing numbers into Excel sheets for eight hours a day and going home feeling like I had accomplished nothing.
My father kept asking me when I was going to "get a proper job." I did not have a good answer. I had a commerce degree, no technical skills, and no clear direction. Most of my friends from college were in similar situations — a few had joined family businesses, a couple had gotten into banking, and the rest were doing whatever they could find. Nobody seemed to be doing anything that felt like a career.
I had this vague sense that digital marketing was something I could get into — mostly because I saw job listings for it everywhere on LinkedIn and Naukri, and the minimum qualification for a lot of them was just a graduation degree. But I had no idea what digital marketing actually involved beyond "posting on social media," which, obviously, it is not.
What Was Not Working
Around December 2023, I paid ₹4,500 for an online course on Udemy. I finished about 40% of it and then stopped. Not because the content was bad — some of it was actually decent — but because I had no way to practice anything, nobody to ask questions to, and no structure keeping me accountable. I would open the app on Sunday evenings, watch two videos, and then close it and not open it again for two weeks. That went on for a while.
By around July 2024, I had a half-finished online course, zero practical experience, and the same ₹12,000 data entry job. The specific moment I decided something had to change was when a guy I went to school with posted on Instagram that he had just gotten a digital marketing job at a startup in Madhapur for ₹24,000 a month. We were the same age. I felt — I do not know how to describe it — not jealous exactly, just like I had been standing still while time kept moving.
How I Found Impact Digital Marketing Institute
Honestly, it came through a friend — a guy named Suresh who I know from my colony in Dilsukhnagar. He had completed a course there a few months earlier and had gotten placed in a digital marketing role. When he mentioned it, I did not immediately think "great, I should do this." My first reaction was skepticism. I had already spent money on a course that went nowhere. I did not want to repeat that.
I asked Suresh a lot of questions. Does it actually teach hands-on stuff? Is it classroom or just theory? What happens after the course — do they help with placements or do they just hand you a certificate? He was patient with all of it and gave me straight answers. He also mentioned that the batch size was small, which was important to me because I had found it hard to stay engaged in large, anonymous settings.
I spent a few days reading things online about the digital marketing course in Hyderabad options that were available — there were several. I visited the Impact Digital Marketing Institute in person before enrolling to talk to someone there directly. What made me finally decide was that they were willing to answer all my questions without pushing me toward a decision, and the fee was something I could manage without taking a loan.
What the Training Actually Covered
The course covers a range of things — SEO, Google Ads, Meta Ads, content marketing, email marketing, Google Analytics, and Search Console. On paper, that is a lot. In practice, the way it was structured meant we moved through each topic with actual assignments rather than just lectures.
The SEO section was where I first felt like my brain was getting stretched in a genuinely new direction. I came in thinking SEO was about stuffing keywords into articles. What I understood by the end of it is that SEO is really about making a webpage answer someone's question better than any other page on the internet — and that the keyword is just how you find out what the question is. That reframe changed how I think about content entirely.
We used Google Search Console for tracking actual search performance, Ahrefs for keyword research and backlink analysis, and Semrush for competitive research. In the paid ads section, we ran practice campaigns inside Google Ads and Meta Ads Manager — not simulations, actual campaigns with small budgets to understand how the platforms behave. The trainer walked through campaign structure, bidding strategies, and what the numbers in the dashboard actually mean.
One thing that surprised me was how much time was spent on Google Analytics 4. I had assumed it would be a minor module. It was not — understanding how to read a GA4 report and connect the data to decisions turned out to be one of the most practically useful things in the entire course.
- SEO — on-page, off-page, technical basics, keyword research using Ahrefs and Semrush
- Google Ads — search campaigns, display, bidding strategies, Quality Score fundamentals
- Meta Ads Manager — campaign structure, audience targeting, pixel setup, ad creative review
- Google Analytics 4 & Search Console — traffic analysis, reporting, connecting data to decisions
- Content Marketing & Email Marketing — content planning, basic copywriting frameworks, email campaign setup
Something specific about how the trainer handled mistakes — when I submitted an SEO audit assignment that was completely wrong in its structure, the feedback was direct but not discouraging. The trainer explained what I had missed, why it mattered, and asked me to redo that section. That approach, where you are expected to fix your own mistakes rather than just move on, is what made the learning stick for me.
I am going to say something that the institute will probably not love me putting in writing — around week three of the course, I sat with my phone at about 11pm and looked up whether the fee was refundable. I had an SEO assignment I could not get right, I had missed one session because of a family thing and felt like I had fallen behind, and I was watching other people in the batch move through things faster than me. I started genuinely questioning whether I had the aptitude for this, or whether I had just convinced myself I did because I was tired of my old job.
I did not ask for a refund. I messaged the trainer instead and admitted I was lost. He responded the next morning and scheduled a 30-minute call where he walked me through exactly where I had gone wrong — not patiently in a practiced way, but in a way that felt like he had actually looked at my work before calling. That call changed things. But I want to be honest that the doubt was real, and it lasted for about a week and a half before it started lifting.
When Things Started to Click
The shift for me happened in the Google Ads module, about five weeks in. We were working on a practice campaign and I had to write ad copy for a hypothetical local services business. For the first time, I was not just following steps — I was making decisions. Which headline would match the intent better? What should the landing page promise to complete the user's journey? I felt like I was thinking like a marketer rather than just doing exercises.
After that session, I started looking at ads online differently. I would see a Google search ad and immediately think about its match type, or why they had chosen that CTA over a different one. That shift — from being someone who uses the internet to someone who understands what is happening behind what they see — was the clearest sign that the training was working.
One of my batchmates, who had a background in graphic design, started asking me questions about the analytics reports around that time. I helped her understand a few GA4 segments. That small moment meant more to me than any grade — it was the first time someone treated me as someone who knew something.
Results After the Course
I completed the course in late February 2025. I started applying for jobs the same week — not waiting for a "right moment," just applying immediately because I had been told by a few people that the market in Hyderabad moves quickly and sitting on your profile was a mistake.
In the first six weeks of applying, I received 11 interview calls. Not all of them were for roles I actually wanted — a couple were for positions that were really just social media handling dressed up with a different title. But several were genuine digital marketing executive roles at small agencies and a couple of direct-hire companies in the Madhapur and Kondapur stretch.
I accepted an offer in mid-March 2025 as a Junior Digital Marketing Executive at a small digital agency in Hyderabad. Starting salary: ₹22,000 per month. That is not a dramatic number. But it is almost double what I was earning at the data entry job, it is a role where I am learning, and it is in the field I chose rather than the field I stumbled into.
Separately, a relative of my trainer's connected me with a small local business that needed someone to manage their Google Ads and handle basic SEO for their site. I worked with them for about six weeks as a freelance arrangement — earned around ₹8,500 from that project. It was not a large amount but the feeling of getting paid for something I learned how to do — from scratch, in a few months — was something I did not expect to feel as strongly as I did.
Honest Pros and Cons
- The trainer gave individual feedback, not group feedback. When I submitted work, the comments I received were specifically about my submission — not a generic "good effort" message sent to everyone. That made a real difference to how quickly I improved.
- Live tool access from early in the course. We were inside Google Ads and Meta Ads Manager from the second week, not watching screencasts of someone else using them. That hands-on time with actual platforms was what made interviews feel manageable.
- Placement support that was practical, not performative. They helped me understand what interviewers for digital marketing jobs in Hyderabad actually ask, and we did mock sessions. I went into my first real interview knowing roughly what to expect.
- Small batch size meant you could not hide. You had to show up and engage. Some people will see that as pressure. I found it kept me accountable in a way that a large class never would have.
- The content marketing module felt rushed. We covered copywriting frameworks and content planning in about a week and a half. For someone coming in with no writing background, I would have needed more time on that section. I had to do extra self-study on it after the course.
- No weekend batch option when I joined. The schedule I was in required me to leave my data entry job early on certain days, which created some awkwardness with my previous employer. I managed it, but a more flexible timing option would have helped.
Who Should Actually Consider This
People sometimes ask whether Impact Digital Marketing Institute in Hyderabad is worth it, or whether it is just another institute promising things it cannot deliver. My answer is that I came in with a B.Com degree, no technical experience, and a ₹12,000 data entry job. I left with skills I can actually demonstrate in an interview, a job paying nearly double what I earned before, and a freelance project already under my belt. That is not a guarantee for anyone else — results genuinely depend on how much you put in. But for me, when I ask whether it was is Impact Digital Marketing Institute worth it, the answer is yes, and I would make the same decision again.
The course covers SEO, Google Ads, Meta Ads, content marketing, analytics, and more — all taught with live practice on real tools. That is a factual summary of what is inside, and it is what made the difference for someone who had been going in circles for over a year.
Thinking About Enrolling?
If you are considering a digital marketing institute in Hyderabad, the best first step is to visit in person and ask the same questions I asked. No pressure to decide on the spot.
Visit Impact Digital Marketing Institute impactdigitalmarketinginstitute.in