The Uncomfortable Truth About Google Ads
The Biggest Beginner Mistake (And How to Avoid It)
What You Actually Need Before You Start
Forget the fancy tools and complex strategies for now. Here’s what you really need to have locked down before you spend your first dollar:Know Your Numbers (Seriously, This Is Non-Negotiable) You need to know exactly how much a customer is worth to you. Not just their first purchase – their lifetime value. If you sell a £50 product but customers typically buy three times over two years, your customer lifetime value is £150, not £50. This number determines how much you can afford to spend to acquire a customer.Have a Realistic Budget I’ll be blunt: if you can only afford to spend £200 a month, Google Ads might not be the best place to start. In most competitive industries, £200 barely gets you enough data to make informed decisions. You’ll likely spend that budget learning what doesn’t work rather than driving meaningful results.A realistic starting budget for most small businesses is £1,000-£2,000 per month, and you should be prepared to spend that for at least three months whilst you figure things out. If that number makes you nervous, consider starting with organic marketing efforts first.
Understand Your Sales Process Google Ads doesn’t magically create customers – it creates opportunities. If someone clicks your ad and lands on a poorly designed website, or calls your business and gets put on hold for ten minutes, your ads will fail no matter how well they’re optimized.
The Reality Check: What Google Ads Can and Can’t Do
- Drive targeted traffic to your website quickly
- Help you test market demand for new products or services
- Complement your existing marketing efforts
- Provide detailed data about customer behavior
- Scale profitable campaigns relatively predictably
- Fix fundamental problems with your business model
- Overcome poor customer service or product quality
- Generate profitable results immediately (despite what you might have heard)
- Work effectively without ongoing management and optimisation
- Replace the need for other marketing channels
The Smart Way to Start
If you’re still reading and haven’t been scared off, here’s how to approach Google Ads intelligently:Start Small and Specific Don’t try to capture every possible customer on day one. Pick your most profitable product or service and focus your initial campaigns there. It’s better to dominate a small niche than to get lost in a broad market.Embrace the Learning Period Your first month (maybe two) is education, not profit generation. You’re paying to learn what works for your specific business. Set expectations accordingly, and don’t panic if you’re not immediately profitable.
Track Everything Set up conversion tracking from day one. If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it. And please, for the love of all that’s holy, don’t rely solely on Google’s attribution models. They tend to be overly generous in crediting themselves for conversions.
Red Flags: When to Pause and Reassess
Stop spending and reassess if:
- You’re not tracking conversions properly
- Your cost per acquisition is higher than your customer lifetime value
- You’re getting lots of clicks but no conversions (after giving it reasonable time)
- You find yourself constantly increasing budgets without improving results
- You’re spending more time managing ads than running your business
The Bottom Line
Ready to dive deeper into Google Ads strategy?
Remember that every business is different, and what works for your competitor might not work for you. Start with the fundamentals, test systematically, and scale what works. Your bank account will thank you.