You are spending hundreds -- maybe thousands -- on Google Ads every month. The clicks are rolling in. Your impression share looks decent. But when you open your CRM or check your inbox, the leads simply are not there. If this sounds familiar, you are far from alone.
Most small and mid-sized businesses that run Google Ads face the same frustrating disconnect: money going out, but meaningful conversions not coming in. The good news is that the problem is almost always fixable. The bad news is that most agencies will not tell you what is actually broken -- because fixing it means admitting the campaign was set up poorly in the first place.
Here are the five most common reasons your Google Ads are not converting, and the exact steps you can take to fix each one.
1. You Are Targeting the Wrong Keywords
This is the number one conversion killer in Google Ads, and it is the mistake we see most often when auditing new client accounts. Businesses target keywords that are either too broad, too competitive, or simply do not match buyer intent.
For example, a local accounting firm bidding on "accounting" is competing with software companies, educational resources, and Wikipedia entries. The searcher is not looking to hire an accountant -- they are looking for a definition. You are paying for a click that was never going to convert.
The fix:
- Focus on long-tail keywords with commercial intent: "small business accountant in [city]" instead of "accounting"
- Use phrase match and exact match instead of broad match -- broad match bleeds budget on irrelevant searches
- Review your Search Terms Report weekly to see what actual queries triggered your ads
- Build keyword groups around specific services, not general categories
Getting keywords right is the foundation. Without it, every other optimization is wasted effort. If you are unsure where to start, our Google Ads management service includes a full keyword audit as part of onboarding.
2. Your Landing Page Does Not Match the Ad
This is the second most common issue, and it is deceptively simple. Someone searches for "emergency plumber near me," clicks your ad that promises 24/7 emergency service, and lands on your generic homepage. No mention of emergency service. No phone number above the fold. No clear call to action.
The disconnect between ad copy and landing page is called "message mismatch," and it destroys your Quality Score and your conversion rate simultaneously. Google notices this mismatch too, which means you pay more per click and rank lower in the auction.
The fix:
- Create dedicated landing pages for each ad group -- not your homepage
- Mirror the exact language from your ad in your landing page headline
- Include one clear call to action above the fold (call, form, or booking link)
- Remove navigation menus on landing pages to reduce exit points
- Ensure page loads in under 3 seconds on mobile
A well-built landing page can double or triple your conversion rate overnight. If your current website is not set up for campaign-specific pages, that is something a properly structured website solves from day one.
3. You Are Not Using Negative Keywords
Negative keywords are the unsung hero of profitable Google Ads campaigns. They tell Google which searches to exclude your ads from, preventing you from paying for clicks that will never convert.
Without negative keywords, your ads for "luxury kitchen renovation" might show up for "DIY kitchen renovation," "kitchen renovation ideas Pinterest," or "cheap kitchen renovation." Those clicks cost real money and produce zero leads. In competitive industries, just a handful of irrelevant clicks per day can waste hundreds of dollars per month.
The fix:
- Add negative keywords from day one: "free," "DIY," "cheap," "jobs," "salary," "how to," "what is"
- Review your Search Terms Report and add negatives at least weekly for the first month, then bi-weekly
- Create a shared negative keyword list that applies across all campaigns
- Use negative keyword tools to discover terms you might not have considered
A healthy account typically has as many negative keywords as it does target keywords. If your negative keyword list is short or nonexistent, that is a red flag worth investigating immediately.
4. Your Ad Copy Does Not Compel Action
Google Ads gives you limited space to make your case. Every character matters. Yet most ads we audit read like a bland list of features: "Professional Service. Quality Work. Call Today." That could be any business in any industry. There is nothing compelling about it, and nothing that differentiates you from the other three ads on the same page.
Great ad copy speaks to the searcher's specific problem, includes a unique value proposition, and creates a reason to click right now rather than scroll past.
The fix:
- Lead with the searcher's pain point, not your company name
- Include specific numbers: "Save 30%," "Results in 14 Days," "500+ Clients Served"
- Use all available ad extensions: sitelinks, callouts, structured snippets, call extensions
- Test at least 3 headline variations per ad group and let data pick the winner
- Add urgency where appropriate: "Limited Spots This Month" or "Free Audit Ends Friday"
If your ad reads like everyone else's, it will perform like everyone else's -- which, statistically, means poorly.
5. Your Bidding Strategy Is Wrong for Your Stage
Google offers automated bidding strategies like Maximize Conversions, Target CPA, and Target ROAS that sound appealing. And they work -- but only when the algorithm has enough data to optimize on. For new campaigns or low-budget accounts, these strategies can burn through your budget without meaningful learning.
We have seen accounts where switching from Target CPA back to Manual CPC cut cost per lead by 40% overnight. The automation is powerful, but it needs fuel in the form of conversion data to work properly.
The fix:
- Start with Manual CPC or Enhanced CPC for the first 2-4 weeks to gather baseline data
- Switch to Maximize Conversions only after you have accumulated at least 30-50 conversions per month
- Use Target CPA only when you have a clear, consistent cost-per-lead benchmark
- Set daily budgets conservatively at first -- you can always scale what works
- Monitor your campaign daily during the first two weeks; do not "set and forget"
The right bidding strategy depends on your data, your budget, and your goals. A strategy that works for a company spending $10,000/month will not work the same way for one spending $1,000/month.
The Bigger Picture
Google Ads is not a "set it and forget it" channel. It requires constant monitoring, testing, and refinement. Most campaigns that fail are not inherently bad -- they just lack the ongoing attention they need to succeed.
If you are running ads yourself, the five fixes above will give you the biggest ROI improvements for your time. If you are working with an agency that is not proactively addressing these issues, it might be time to ask hard questions -- or find a partner who treats your budget like their own.
We help SMBs fix underperforming Google Ads campaigns every week. If you would like a second opinion on your account, try our free website audit or reach out directly -- no strings attached.