Agency insights
Thoughts, lessons and practical advice for Google Ads agencies, freelancers and consultants. Subjects include finding and managing clients, building tools, business strategy and staying relevant.
Last updated July 2026
I faced this problem with a client of mine. Google Ads is working really well for his business but his sales team was craving more leads.
We’ve got a wide set of keywords covering every possible way we’ve seen people search for his services. We’re advertising on search and search partners and running the ads 24/7. We’ve got all the budget we need, and more. We’re getting almost 100% impression share.
I’d done all the normal things to optimise the Google Ads campaigns:
And they've worked. They’ve got us from a pilot campaign generating 79 leads a month to a steady 500+ leads every month.
But, we’ve hit a plateau.
The strategy that got us from 0 to 500 leads a month isn’t going to take us from 500 leads to a 1 000 leads a month. We needed a different approach.
In economics, the concept of complementary goods describes things that you buy together.
When you buy a car, you buy fuel. When you buy a printer, you buy ink. You buy computer hardware and then you buy computer software.
Cars and fuel are complementary goods, as are printers and ink, and hardware and software. You can’t use one without having the other.
My client helps people immigrate from South Africa to Australia.
Someone thinking about moving to another country will also think about where they're going to work and live. They'll Google for jobs, property prices, medical care etc.
These searches are complementary to immigration services, in the same way fuel is to a car.
A search for "plumbing jobs in sydney" is a clue that the searcher is thinking about emigrating. So is a search for "perth property prices".
I set up a test campaign targeting South Africans searching for a job in Australia. It’s worked better than expected so far.
We’ve only had 70 leads so far so it’s very early days, but, the sales team tell us that these leads are as good as the others we’re getting from Google Ads.
We’ll keep monitoring to see how many of these leads turn into clients. If it’s a reasonable number we’ll optimise the campaign to get as many leads as possible.
If you’re interested in a similar sideways approach to using Google Ads you should check out the rubber glove approach to cold calling.
The goal was to spend a small amount, gather data, and see what actually happens. We got bookings, but the value distribution surprised me and changed how I'm going to structure this account.
Adding negative keywords from the search terms report has always been part of diligent Google Ads management. But while it's still important, it's becoming less and less effective. Here's what's working for me today.
Some say you should start by focusing on clicks to build up data, others say that you should use a conversion-based bidding strategy from day one. Here are the exact settings and performance data from a recent launch
You can't run profitable Google Ads without working plumbing - the systems that carry data from the website, to the business and back to Google. The problem is that the plumbing is invisible.
The root cause is a data-gap. Ad data lives in Google. Business data lives in the office. I’m stuck in the middle, with no way of combining the data in a way that supports better decisions. I think we can change that.
Over the last few months they'd spent about $35,000 on Google Ads. They'd made no sales, but their ad manager kept telling them how well the ads were doing.
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