Most small businesses running Google Ads are wasting 40-60% of their budget. Not because Google Ads does not work — it absolutely does — but because common setup mistakes bleed money silently.
Here are the most expensive mistakes and exactly how to fix each one.
Mistake 1: Using Broad Match on All Keywords
Broad match means Google shows your ad for any search it thinks is “related” to your keyword. If you are a plumber in Chicago and bid on “plumber” in broad match, you might get shown for “plumber costume for Halloween” or “plumber salary” — completely irrelevant searches that cost you real money.
The fix: Start with Phrase Match and Exact Match. Phrase match (“plumber Chicago”) shows your ad when someone searches that phrase in some order. Exact match ([plumber in Chicago]) only shows for that specific search. More control, less waste.
Only introduce broad match once you have conversion data and want to expand — and always pair it with a strong negative keyword list.
Mistake 2: No Negative Keywords
Negative keywords are searches you actively exclude. This is one of the most important settings in Google Ads and one of the most ignored.
For a local service business, add these negatives immediately:
- “free” (people looking for free services will not pay you)
- “DIY”, “how to”, “tutorial” (informational searches, not buying intent)
- “salary”, “jobs”, “career” (people job hunting, not buying)
- Your competitors’ names (unless you specifically want to target them)
- “reviews” (people still in research phase)
Check your Search Terms Report weekly (Search keywords → Search terms tab) and add any irrelevant searches as negatives immediately.
Mistake 3: Sending All Traffic to Your Homepage
Your homepage is designed for everyone. A landing page is designed for one specific person with one specific intent.
If someone searches “emergency plumber Chicago” and lands on your homepage that talks about all your services, remodeling, maintenance, and history — you have lost them. They wanted emergency plumbing, now they have to find it.
The fix: Create dedicated landing pages that match the exact search. “Emergency plumber” ad → emergency plumber landing page with big phone number, urgency, and a form. “Kitchen renovation” ad → kitchen page. The landing page should mirror the ad headline almost exactly.
Rule: The message a visitor sees when they land must match the message in the ad they clicked. Any disconnect = lost conversion.
Mistake 4: Not Tracking Conversions Properly
If you are not tracking which keywords lead to calls, form fills, and customers — you are flying blind. You have no idea which part of your spend is working.
Set up these conversion actions in Google Ads:
- Form submission (thank-you page view)
- Phone call from ad (Google’s call extension tracking)
- Phone call from website (add Google’s call tracking script to your number)
Once conversions are tracked, let Google’s Smart Bidding do its job. Switch from manual CPC to “Maximize Conversions” or “Target CPA” once you have 30+ conversions in 30 days.
Mistake 5: Running 24/7 When Your Business Is Not
If you are a dental practice that is only open Monday-Friday 9-5, running ads on Saturday night is pure waste. People click, cannot reach you, and you paid for that click.
The fix: Go to Settings → Ad Schedule and limit your ads to your business hours, plus an hour or two on either side for people who research before calling.
Mistake 6: Ignoring Quality Score
Quality Score (1-10) is Google’s rating of how relevant your keyword, ad, and landing page are to a user’s search. A higher Quality Score means you pay less per click for the same position.
A competitor with a Quality Score of 8 might pay $1.50 per click for position 1. You with a Quality Score of 4 might pay $3.00 for position 2. Same result, double the cost.
Improve Quality Score by: tightening your keyword groups (one theme per ad group), writing ads that directly reference the keyword, and improving landing page relevance and speed.
Mistake 7: Too Small a Budget to Get Data
Running Google Ads on $5/day in a competitive local market means you might get 2-3 clicks a day. You cannot make any meaningful optimization decisions with that data.
The minimum viable budget for most local service businesses is $300-500/month. Below that, you are spending enough to waste money but not enough to learn. Either commit to a real budget or consider if there is a better channel for your stage.
Quick Audit Checklist
Go through your Google Ads account right now and check:
- ☐ Are you using Phrase or Exact match (not just Broad)?
- ☐ Do you have a negative keyword list with 20+ terms?
- ☐ Are you sending traffic to specific landing pages (not your homepage)?
- ☐ Are conversions tracked for calls and form fills?
- ☐ Are ads scheduled for business hours only?
- ☐ Is your Quality Score above 6 for main keywords?
If you answered no to more than two of these, your campaigns need work. Book a free call and we will audit your Google Ads account at no charge and show you exactly where your budget is going.