Google Ads offers a powerful way to reach potential customers. However, many companies jump into Google Ads without fully understanding how to set up and manage their campaigns for success.
The result?
Wasted budget, lost opportunities, and a frustrating experience.
In this blog post, I'll dive into some of the common mistakes I see businesses making when they first start experimenting with Google Ads. Then I'll provide some guidance on how to avoid (or correct) them to help you get your campaigns on track.
One of the biggest mistakes I see businesses make when they first jump into Google ads is not having conversion or overall tracking setup properly. Proper setup means the tag is firing on all pages, different event tags are firing when you want them to, and you have verified everything is working properly with the Google Tag Assistant.
Without this, your campaigns will underperform because Google really doesn't know who to target or show your ads to which limits how well it can optimize.
Google Ads provides detailed instructions on how to set up conversion tracking: https://support.google.com/google-ads/answer/1722054.
However, if you're uncomfortable with code or don't really want to deal with it, you can:
Keywords are the backbone of Google Ads. They represent the search terms you want your ads to show up for when people search. I think they are also the most misunderstood and misused piece of Google Ads.
A very common mistake that I see businesses make when they first start out with Google Ads is they don't really understand how keywords work and as a result they:
Keyword optimization is an ongoing process but the first step is understanding them.
So this mistake is less common for businesses right out of the gate because typically people have a set budget in mind that they want to start with. However, I see this time and time again - a campaign will be performing well so the business decides they want to raise the budget. But, instead of doing it incrementally they double or triple the budget overnight and campaign performance plummets.
Why does this happen: At its core, Google is just a fancy algorithm that takes in your input (budget, keywords, etc.) as well as a ton of user signals to determine which ads get shown when. When you make drastic changes with budgets or keywords, the algorithm does a little bit of a reset which usually causes campaign performance to go down in the short term.
This is probably the biggest mistake I see businesses starting out with Google Ads make. When you first start out, your goal should be to provide guardrails for Google i.e. what you want a customer to do (e.g. purchase, fill out a form etc.) and a broad sense of what potential customers would be searching for.
It should not be to provide exactly what the person will be searching for, who they are, and how much you are willing to pay. That means unless you are experienced enough to understand and/or have an extremely good reason to you should probably ignore time restrictions, location restrictions, phrase/exact match, and setting target CPC or CPA.
All these things will do is limit the amount of data Google's algorithm has to optimize.
Google is way smarter than any of us and has access to more information than we could imagine. Tell it what you want it to do and then let it do its work.
Although this has less to do with Google Ads, the last mistake I see pretty commonly with people testing out Google Ads is a bad landing page. You could have the best Google Ads expert in the world but if your landing page is terrible (confusing, no clear offer, etc.) then you're wasting your money.
Some of the more common landing page errors I see are:
Google Ads can be an incredibly powerful tool for driving traffic, generating leads, and boosting sales. However, in the wrong hands things can go bad quickly. By understanding some of these common mistakes, I hope you are able to get your Google Ads on track and take your business to the next level!
If you're feeling overwhelmed or just want Google Ads Management taken off your plate, feel free to reach out. I provide free 1-1 consultations for all aspects of digital marketing and would love to see if I can help!
Want more Google Ads Resources - check these out: