Our team managed over $1.7 million in paid ads across Google, Meta, LinkedIn, and more in 2025.
That’s a lot of clicks.
A lot of conversions.
And unfortunately… a lot of preventable mistakes we've witnessed small businesses make along the way.
After auditing and managing dozens of Google Ads accounts, we’ve noticed something consistent: most small business accounts struggle because of structure, tracking, and message alignment.
Here are the biggest Google Ads mistakes we see, as well as how to avoid them.
Google makes it easy to launch campaigns.
It does not make it easy to structure them correctly.
We often see branded and non-branded search lumped together, Performance Max running without clear asset strategy, and display campaigns with no audience layering.
When everything is blended, nothing is measurable.
How to Fix It: Separate campaigns by intent:
Clarity = control.
Broad match can work, but not without guardrails.
We regularly audit accounts spending thousands on clicks from people who were never actually looking for the service.
For example, a company bidding on “pressure washing Jacksonville” might show up for searches like:
Those clicks cost money, but those people aren’t always hiring a company. If you let those search terms run wild, you might as well throw your ad budget in the garbage.
How to Fix It:
• Group keywords by service (roof cleaning, driveway cleaning, etc.)
• Check your Search Terms report weekly to see what people actually searched
• Add negative keywords like “DIY,” “jobs,” and “rental”
• Make sure your ad copy matches the keyword
When the search → ad → landing page all match, Google rewards you with lower costs and better results.
If someone searches “emergency HVAC repair near me” and lands on your homepage, you’re losing money. Remember, high-intent clicks demand high-relevance pages.
Imagine searching for emergency AC repair and landing on a homepage talking about company history, careers, and a photo of the office dog. Not exactly helpful.
How to fix it:
• Send traffic to service-specific landing pages
• Match the headline to your focus keywords
• Remove distractions and keep the CTA obvious, and above the fold (first scroll)
Example:
Search → “Roof Cleaning Jacksonville”
Headline → “Professional Roof Cleaning in Jacksonville”
When intent and relevance line up, Google rewards you with better Quality Scores and lower CPCs.
Simple math.
We see this one a lot. We’re going to hold your hand when we tell you this…
Turning campaigns off after 3 days, doubling budgets after one good week, or rebuilding everything because Tuesday felt slow is not optimization.
It’s panic.
Example: Your campaign runs for 4 days and hasn’t produced a lead yet.
The rash decision: Turn the campaign off, rewrite all the ads, and start over.
The better decision: Give the campaign time to gather data. If this is a new campaign, it may need 7 or more days to learn. Review search terms, monitor click-through rates, and evaluate performance once enough traffic has accumulated.
Google’s machine learning needs time and stability. Constant changes just reset the learning process.
Running Google Ads can sometimes feel like trying to assemble IKEA furniture without the instructions.
We’ve spent years managing campaigns for both B2B and B2C clients, and one thing we know for sure: when Google Ads works, it’s not luck — it’s structure.
If you're wondering whether your campaigns are humming along nicely… or quietly lighting money on fire… we’d be happy to take a look.
Book a complimentary consultation with our award-winning team, and we’ll share where we see opportunity.
To a smarter PPC strategy and beyond 🚀!