Design PPC Campaign
Architect a pay-per-click search campaign with the right account structure, keyword match types, ad copy, bidding strategy, and conversion tracking to maximize ROI.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: Google Partner agencies, WordStream methodology, HubSpot paid ads playbook — all enforce SKAG/STAG structures and Quality Score optimization as the basis for account efficiency
Impact: Campaigns following best-practice structure achieve Quality Scores of 7–10 vs. industry average of 5–6, reducing CPC by 30–50%; tightly themed ad groups achieve CTR 2–3× higher than broad ad groups
Why best: Szetela & Kerschbaum's account hierarchy (campaign → ad group → keyword → ad → landing page) ensures that every element is aligned to the same intent — alignment drives Quality Score, which drives lower CPC and better ad rank.
Sources: Szetela & Kerschbaum "Pay-Per-Click Search Engine Marketing" (2010); Google Ads Quality Score documentation; WordStream "Google Ads Benchmarks" (annual)
Steps
- Define campaign objective — match objective to campaign type: brand awareness → Display/Discovery; lead generation → Search; product sales → Shopping; retargeting → Display/Search RLSA.
- Conduct keyword research — use Google Keyword Planner, SEMrush, or Ahrefs; identify: high-intent head terms, long-tail variants, brand terms, competitor terms, and negative keywords.
- Segment into campaign structure — organize keywords by theme, funnel stage (awareness/consideration/decision), and match type; separate brand vs. non-brand; separate geographic targeting if relevant.
- Build tightly themed ad groups — each ad group covers one keyword theme (5–15 closely related keywords); this directly improves ad relevance and Quality Score.
- Write ad copy variations — create 3 responsive search ads per ad group with 15 headlines and 4 descriptions; include keyword in headline 1; test distinct value propositions across variations.
- Set up ad extensions — configure: sitelinks (4–6), callouts (4–8), structured snippets, call extensions (if phone is a conversion), location extensions (if local); extensions increase CTR by average 10–15%.
- Define bidding strategy — for new campaigns: Manual CPC for control; after 50+ conversions/month → Target CPA; after stable CPA → Target ROAS; never use Maximize Clicks as a long-term strategy.
- Set budget and bid limits — set daily budget based on target monthly spend ÷ 30.4; set max CPC bids at 2–3× target CPA / expected CVR for manual bidding.
- Configure conversion tracking — implement Google Ads tag or import GA4 goals; ensure all key conversions (purchase, form submit, phone call) are tracked before launching.
- Launch and optimize — after 2 weeks: pause keywords with >50 clicks and 0 conversions; add negative keywords from search terms report; A/B test landing pages; scale budget on ad groups with ROAS >target.
Rules
- Never launch without conversion tracking — unconstrained PPC spend without measurement is budget burning.
- Negative keyword lists must be maintained weekly — search term reports reveal irrelevant queries driving wasted spend from day one.
- Quality Score below 5 is a warning signal — investigate ad relevance and landing page experience; low QS means paying more for worse position.
- Brand campaigns must be separate from non-brand — mixing allows non-brand performance to inflate or mask brand metrics.
- Smart bidding requires conversion data — Target CPA and Target ROAS are unreliable with fewer than 50 conversions/month.
Common Mistakes
- Too-broad ad groups — grouping 50+ unrelated keywords in one ad group kills ad relevance and Quality Score.
- No negative keywords at launch — every campaign launches showing ads for irrelevant queries; negative keyword lists must be pre-populated from keyword research.
- Ignoring search terms report — actual queries triggering ads often include irrelevant variations; review weekly.
- Sending all traffic to homepage — landing page relevance is a Quality Score factor; send each ad group to a matched landing page.
- Setting-and-forgetting — PPC requires weekly optimization; dormant campaigns accumulate waste and miss optimization opportunities.
When NOT to Use
- Markets with extremely low search volume for the product category
- Products/services where search intent is unclear or rare
- When organic search (SEO) or alternative acquisition channels have dramatically lower CAC for the same audience