Look, if you're serious about localized content and you think just any residential proxy will do, think again. I see so many guys jumping into geo-targeted proxies without doing their homework and getting burned. Bad providers are flooding the market with IPs that look legit but are actually junk or overused, which kills your CTR and makes your whole tracking suspect. It's not just about speed or price, it's about whether those IPs are genuinely geo-specific, whitelisted in the right places, and not flagged or recycled. Do your data, and ask for detailed logs from the provider before dropping serious cash. What does your tracking say about your proxy quality? If you're seeing weird drops in conversions or odd bounce rates when you switch geo, that's your sign you got a bad provider. I've seen guys waste hundreds on proxies that are just recycled datacenter IPs dressed up as residential. That's not geo-targeting. That's throwing money down the drain. If you want to do it right, get a provider who actually owns their IP ranges, can guarantee real residential or mobile IPs in your target areas, and offers decent whitelisting support. Otherwise, you're just chasing a ghost and blaming your tools.