Google Ads tips are decisive actions and strategies that UK businesses apply to maximise campaign performance and return on investment. Pay-per-click (PPC) advertising on Google is the recognised industry term for what most people call “running Google Ads,” and understanding the distinction matters. PPC rewards precision. Vague targeting, weak ad copy, and poor conversion tracking all bleed budget without delivering results. The businesses that win on Google Ads treat every campaign decision as a data point, not a guess. This guide covers the most effective techniques for UK business owners and marketing professionals who want to reduce wasted spend and improve ROI in 2026.
1. What are the best Google Ads tips for bidding strategy?
Bidding strategy is the single biggest lever in any Google Ads account. Choose the wrong one at the wrong time and the algorithm works against you, not for you.
New campaigns should start with Maximise Conversions bidding. This strategy tells Google to spend your daily budget in a way that generates as many conversions as possible. The key reason to start here is data. Google’s algorithm needs conversion history before it can make accurate predictions. Experts recommend gathering 30–50 conversions within 30 days before switching to Target CPA or Target ROAS. That threshold gives the algorithm enough signal to bid efficiently.

Once you have sufficient data, Target CPA (cost per acquisition) and Target ROAS (return on ad spend) become the right tools. Target CPA tells Google how much you are willing to pay for a conversion. Target ROAS tells it what revenue return you expect per pound spent. Both strategies require realistic targets grounded in your unit economics, not wishful thinking.
Pro Tip: When first setting a Target CPA, set it 10–15% higher than your acceptable CPA. This gives the algorithm room to operate without being constrained too early. Tighten the target gradually as data accumulates.
- Start new campaigns on Maximise Conversions to build data quickly.
- Switch to Target CPA or Target ROAS after 30–50 conversions in 30 days.
- Set initial Target CPA targets 10–15% above your true acceptable CPA.
- Review bid strategy performance every two weeks, not daily.
2. How should you approach keyword selection and match types?
Keyword selection determines who sees your ads. Get it wrong and you pay for clicks from people who will never buy from you.
Start conservatively. Phrase match and exact match keywords give you control over search intent. Phrase match shows your ad when a search includes your keyword phrase, in order, with possible words around it. Exact match shows your ad only when the search closely matches your keyword. Both are tighter than broad match, which means less wasted spend in the early stages of a campaign.
Broad match has its place, but only with strong negative keyword lists and enough conversion data to guide the algorithm. Without that foundation, broad match will spend your budget on irrelevant searches. Negative keyword lists can save 15–25% of ad spend by blocking clicks from searches that will never convert. That saving compounds over time and directly reduces your cost per click.
In most accounts audited, 20% of keywords drive 80% of conversions. That concentration means you should identify your top performers early and protect their budget allocation. Pause keywords with consistent spend but no conversions. Add high-performing search terms as dedicated keywords so they reach the correct ad group and landing page.
| Approach | Best for | Risk level |
|---|---|---|
| Exact match | Tight intent control, low volume | Low |
| Phrase match | Balanced reach and relevance | Medium |
| Broad match | Scale, with strong negatives and data | High without safeguards |
Regular keyword hygiene is non-negotiable. Review the Search Terms report weekly. Add irrelevant terms to your negative keyword list. Promote high-performing search terms to dedicated keywords. This single habit separates well-managed accounts from those that slowly haemorrhage budget.
3. Writing ad copy and landing pages that convert
Ad copy and landing pages work as a pair. Strong copy that sends traffic to a weak page wastes every penny of your click budget.
Responsive Search Ads (RSAs) are the standard format in Google Ads. RSAs accept up to 15 headlines and 4 descriptions, allowing Google’s algorithm to test combinations and serve the best-performing version to each user. The practical implication is that you should write headlines that cover different angles: your core offer, a key benefit, a specific number or stat, and a direct call to action. Variety gives the algorithm more to work with.
Pin your two or three strongest headlines to fixed positions when they contain information that must always appear, such as your brand name or a specific offer. Leave the remaining slots unpinned so Google can test freely. Include numbers in headlines where possible. “Save 20% on your first order” outperforms “Save money today” because it is specific and credible.
Pro Tip: Never send paid traffic to your homepage. Landing pages should match search intent, remove navigation friction, carry a single clear call to action, include social proof, and load quickly. A page built for one purpose converts far better than a general service page.
- Write at least 10 distinct headlines per RSA, covering different angles.
- Include your primary keyword in at least two headlines.
- Match the landing page headline to the ad headline for message continuity.
- Remove navigation menus from landing pages to reduce exit points.
- Add testimonials, reviews, or trust signals above the fold.
Quality Score in Google Ads reflects the alignment between your keyword, ad copy, and landing page. A higher Quality Score lowers your cost per click and improves your ad position. Improving that alignment is one of the most cost-effective ways to reduce cost per click without increasing your budget.
4. How conversion tracking and data analysis improve ROI
Conversion tracking is the foundation of every optimisation decision. Without accurate tracking, you are making budget decisions based on incomplete information.
Inconsistent attribution methods lead to skewed data that hampers optimisation. The most common mistake is tracking multiple conversion actions with different values and counting them all equally. Set up conversion tracking tied directly to business outcomes: form submissions, phone calls, purchases, or qualified lead events. Assign accurate values where possible. This gives the algorithm the right signal to optimise toward.
The Search Terms report is your most useful weekly tool. It shows the actual searches that triggered your ads. Use it to find irrelevant terms to exclude and high-performing terms to promote. Top-performing search terms should be added as keywords to ensure the right ad group and landing page serve each search. This is a simple habit that most advertisers skip, and it compounds into significant performance gains over time.
Pause keywords that have accumulated 100 or more clicks with zero conversions. That threshold is a clear signal that the keyword is not converting for your business, regardless of how relevant it appears. Reallocate that budget to keywords that are already proving their value.
- Connect Google Ads to Google Analytics 4 for full funnel visibility.
- Set primary conversion actions tied to revenue or qualified leads.
- Review the Search Terms report every week without exception.
- Pause non-converting keywords at 100+ clicks.
- Avoid accepting automated suggestions without reviewing their impact first.
Overreliance on automation without manual review causes inefficient spend and stagnation. Google’s automated suggestions are built to increase spend, not always to improve your specific return. Treat them as prompts for investigation, not instructions to follow blindly.
5. Account structure and campaign organisation
A well-structured Google Ads account makes every other optimisation easier. Poor structure creates conflicting signals, budget waste, and reporting confusion.
Organise campaigns by product or service category, not by match type or budget size. Each campaign should have a clear purpose and a dedicated budget. Ad groups within each campaign should cluster tightly around a single theme or keyword group. This tight structure means your ad copy can speak directly to the search intent, which improves Quality Score and reduces cost per click.
Separate branded and non-branded campaigns. Branded keywords, searches that include your company name, convert at a much higher rate and at a lower cost. Mixing them with non-branded keywords distorts your performance data and makes it harder to allocate budget accurately. A well-structured account also makes it far easier to identify which campaigns are driving growth and which are draining budget.
Use campaign-level location targeting to reflect where your customers actually are. UK businesses often waste budget on clicks from outside their service area. Set location targeting to “Presence” rather than “Presence or interest” to ensure your ads only show to people physically located in your target area.
6. Audience targeting and exclusions
Audience targeting in Google Ads goes beyond keywords. It lets you adjust bids, tailor messaging, and exclude users who are unlikely to convert.
Add audience segments to your search campaigns in observation mode first. This means your ads still show to everyone, but you collect data on how different audiences perform. After four to six weeks, you will have enough data to apply bid adjustments. Increase bids for audiences that convert well, such as past website visitors or in-market segments relevant to your product. Reduce bids or exclude audiences that consistently underperform.
Remarketing lists for search ads (RLSA) are one of the most underused tools in PPC. They let you show different ads, or bid more aggressively, for users who have already visited your site. A user who visited your pricing page is a fundamentally different prospect from a cold searcher. Treat them differently and your conversion rate will reflect that.
A well-defined ideal customer profile shapes every audience decision, from which segments to target to which to exclude. If you have not defined your ICP clearly, including company size, buyer role, and pain points, your audience targeting will always be approximate. Approximate targeting means approximate results.
Key takeaways
The most effective approach to Google Ads is to combine tight account structure, data-driven bidding, and consistent weekly optimisation to reduce wasted spend and improve return on investment.
| Point | Details |
|---|---|
| Start with Maximise Conversions | Collect 30–50 conversions before switching to Target CPA or Target ROAS. |
| Use negative keywords from day one | Negative keyword lists can save 15–25% of ad spend by blocking irrelevant clicks. |
| Match ad copy to landing pages | Alignment between keyword, ad, and landing page improves Quality Score and lowers cost per click. |
| Track conversions tied to business outcomes | Inconsistent tracking skews data and leads to poor budget decisions. |
| Review Search Terms weekly | Promoting high-performing search terms and adding negatives compounds performance gains over time. |
My blunt view on why most Google Ads accounts plateau
The accounts I see plateau most often have one thing in common. They are technically set up correctly but strategically misaligned. The bidding strategy is fine. The keywords are reasonable. But the campaign goals do not reflect how the business actually makes money.
Google Ads accounts plateau most often because of failures upstream: an unclear ideal customer profile, incorrect unit economics, or campaign goals that do not match business objectives. I have audited accounts where the advertiser was optimising for form submissions, but the sales team only closed leads from phone calls. The data looked healthy. The business was not growing.
My honest advice is to spend as much time on strategy as you do on tactics. Before you touch a bid strategy or write a headline, ask yourself: do I know exactly who I am trying to reach, what they need to hear, and what a conversion is actually worth to my business? If the answer is vague, no amount of keyword refinement will fix it.
The other pattern I see consistently is over-trust in automation. Google’s automated recommendations are not neutral. They are designed to increase activity on the platform. That does not always mean they increase your return. Manual review of every significant change is not optional. It is the difference between an account that grows and one that spends more to stay still.
— Martin
How Citricmedia helps UK businesses get more from Google Ads
Citricmedia has spent over 27 years helping UK businesses generate high-quality leads and sales through performance-driven Google Ads management. The team handles bid strategy, keyword management, ad copy, conversion tracking, and ongoing optimisation, all aligned to your specific business objectives.

If your current campaigns are spending without delivering the returns you expect, Citricmedia’s approach starts with a clear audit of where budget is being lost and what structural changes will have the greatest impact. You get transparent reporting, clear recommendations, and a team that treats your budget as carefully as its own. Speak to Citricmedia about PPC campaign management built around measurable results.
FAQ
What bidding strategy should I start with on Google Ads?
Start new campaigns with Maximise Conversions to gather data quickly. Switch to Target CPA or Target ROAS after collecting 30–50 conversions within 30 days.
How do negative keywords reduce wasted spend?
Negative keywords block your ads from showing on irrelevant searches. They can save 15–25% of ad spend by preventing clicks that will never convert.
What is a Responsive Search Ad?
A Responsive Search Ad (RSA) accepts up to 15 headlines and 4 descriptions. Google’s algorithm tests combinations and serves the best-performing version to each user.
Why should I separate branded and non-branded campaigns?
Branded keywords convert at a higher rate and lower cost than non-branded terms. Mixing them distorts performance data and makes accurate budget allocation harder.
How often should I review my Google Ads campaigns?
Review the Search Terms report weekly and assess overall campaign performance every two weeks. Daily changes disrupt the algorithm’s learning period and lead to inconsistent results.

