Google Ads Management Services
Google Ads reaches buyers at the exact second they go looking for what you sell, and you only pay when one of them clicks. Our google ads management services exist to make those clicks turn into booked jobs, filled carts, and phone calls instead of a budget that quietly drains. A small senior team has handled paid search here since 2018, and we charge a flat $499 a month to manage it, with your ad budget paid straight to Google and never marked up by us.
You are probably here for four answers: who touches your account, what they do with it, what it costs, and when it pays off. A senior manager runs your campaigns, the management fee sits apart from your ad spend so nobody is tempted to inflate your budget, and you can leave any month because there is no lock-in.
If you would rather walk through it with a person, book a call and we can follow where the money is going, line by line.
What we run on Google
Google is a stack of advertising surfaces, and a campaign succeeds or fails on how well those surfaces are wired together. As a google ads agency we run the pieces below, pulling each one in according to what your account actually needs rather than selling you a fixed bundle.
These are the text ads that appear when someone types a query, and for most advertisers they are the core. We organize them around buyer intent, write the headlines that earn the click, and keep match types tight so your money chases purchases rather than idle browsing.
Google’s automated campaign type spreads one budget across Search, Shopping, YouTube, and Display. It can work well, but handed nothing it wastes money fast, so we feed it strong assets, clear audience signals, and guardrails, then watch it closely instead of trusting the black box.
For a store, what decides whether you show up, and at what price, is the product feed. We clean and structure titles, descriptions, images, and attributes so the right items appear for the right searches, because a sharp feed beats clever bidding nearly every time.
We research the terms worth paying for and group them by how ready the searcher is to buy. Just as important, we read the search-term report constantly and block the queries that waste money. Adding negatives is fully half the work, and the half most advertisers skip.
None of the decisions matter if the measurement is wrong, and broken tracking is far more common than people expect. We set it up correctly through Google Ads and Google Analytics so every choice rests on real sales data, not a dashboard that is guessing.
A strong ad pointed at a weak page is money set on fire. We review the page behind each click and flag the slow loads, the confusing forms, and the missing trust signals that kill a sale after you have already paid for the visit.
Most people do not buy on the first visit. We build remarketing lists and audience segments so you can reach past visitors and look-alike buyers, bringing back the people who showed interest but left before converting.
Each month you see spend, conversions, cost per acquisition, return on ad spend, and which campaigns earned their keep. Every report spells out plainly where the budget went and what it returned, in language a human can read.
Search campaigns.
These are the text ads that appear when someone types a query, and for most advertisers they are the core. We organize them around buyer intent, write the headlines that earn the click, and keep match types tight so your money chases purchases rather than idle browsing.
Performance Max.
Google’s automated campaign type spreads one budget across Search, Shopping, YouTube, and Display. It can work well, but handed nothing it wastes money fast, so we feed it strong assets, clear audience signals, and guardrails, then watch it closely instead of trusting the black box.
Google Shopping and feed optimization.
For a store, what decides whether you show up, and at what price, is the product feed. We clean and structure titles, descriptions, images, and attributes so the right items appear for the right searches, because a sharp feed beats clever bidding nearly every time.
Keyword and negative-keyword management.
We research the terms worth paying for and group them by how ready the searcher is to buy. Just as important, we read the search-term report constantly and block the queries that waste money. Adding negatives is fully half the work, and the half most advertisers skip.
Conversion tracking.
None of the decisions matter if the measurement is wrong, and broken tracking is far more common than people expect. We set it up correctly through Google Ads and Google Analytics so every choice rests on real sales data, not a dashboard that is guessing.
Landing-page and conversion review.
A strong ad pointed at a weak page is money set on fire. We review the page behind each click and flag the slow loads, the confusing forms, and the missing trust signals that kill a sale after you have already paid for the visit.
Audiences and remarketing.
Most people do not buy on the first visit. We build remarketing lists and audience segments so you can reach past visitors and look-alike buyers, bringing back the people who showed interest but left before converting.
Transparent reporting.
Each month you see spend, conversions, cost per acquisition, return on ad spend, and which campaigns earned their keep. Every report spells out plainly where the budget went and what it returned, in language a human can read.
How we launch and scale
We do not dump budget into a fresh account on day one. We follow a sequence that protects your money early and pushes for growth only once the data says it is safe. Here is how a typical engagement moves from first look to steady scaling.
A fair word on timing. Clicks and early conversions can show up within the first weeks of launch, but dependable, profitable performance takes longer as the account accumulates data and we prune whatever fails to convert. Anyone who guarantees a return before they have even seen your account is pitching, not planning. We would rather hand you an honest read for your situation.
Want a scope and a fixed price?
Why advertisers stay
A short, repeating list of reasons drives advertisers away from their last agency or freelancer. These are the points where we usually come out the better fit.
Where this fits: a moving company
This work fits a regional moving company running Google Search for booking leads especially well, because moving is a high-ticket, high-intent purchase where one wrong campaign can swallow a week’s budget on tire-kickers. Picture a mover paying for every “movers near me” click with no idea which of those clicks became a booked job: we would get call and form tracking working first, split long-distance searches from local moves, block the junk queries, and tie spend back to actual booked moves, so you can finally see which keywords fill the calendar and which just cost money.
The same approach holds for plumbers, roofers, law firms, dentists, and any local business buying leads off Google Search. If you cannot say which clicks turn into customers, that gap is the precise thing we close.
The price is on the page.
Plenty of agencies bury every number until a sales call. We print ours in the open: $499 a month to manage Google Ads, plain and simple, so the value is yours to judge well before any conversation.
Management fee and ad spend stay separate.
Your $499 management fee is what you pay us. Your ad budget is paid straight to Google and is never bundled into our invoice. Keeping the two apart means we have no reason to push you toward a bigger budget, and you can always see what went to us versus what went to the platform. (Full breakdown in the pricing section below.)
Senior managers, not a junior queue.
Experienced people run your account, not whoever started last week. Paid search punishes inattention quickly, and seasoned judgment is what stops a campaign from quietly leaking money.
No lock-in.
Billing runs month-to-month. If our management stops earning its fee, a notice is all it takes to walk away clean, with no contract pinning you down. That setup keeps our attention on the one number that counts, which is your return.
The account is yours.
Everything is built and operated inside your own Google Ads account, under your login and your ownership. Should we ever part ways, the account, its history, and its data stay with you in full. We never sit on a client’s login to trap them.
No markup on ad spend.
What you budget for Google is what Google gets. We add no percentage, resell none of your media, and take no cut of the spend. Our pay is the flat fee, and nothing about your budget changes what we earn.
We will tell you to spend less.
When a campaign is underperforming, or your money would do more sitting out a month, we say so directly. Steering a client away from pointless spend is what earns us the trust to handle the rest.
Google Ads pricing
Here is the part almost no agency will put in writing. Our management fee is a flat $499 a month. Your minimum ad budget is $1,500 a month, and that money is paid directly to Google, never to us and never with a markup added. If you run ads on two or more platforms, say Google alongside Meta or Microsoft, your management fees drop by 10 percent. That is the whole pricing structure, stated plainly so you can judge it before any conversation.
Why a flat fee instead of a percentage of your spend? A percentage model quietly pays an agency to talk you into spending more, whether or not the extra budget earns anything. A flat fee kept apart from your ad budget removes that conflict. We earn the same $499 whether your spend is lean or large, so our only incentive is to make your campaigns profitable.
A few honest factors decide where your overall monthly total lands:
Your ad budget level. This is the biggest line on your invoice and you set it, paid to Google. A larger budget reaches more buyers and gathers data faster, but more is not automatically better, so we land on an opening figure that leaves the campaigns enough room to work without overspending.
The number of platforms you run. Google on its own is the simplest setup. Adding Meta, Microsoft, or another channel brings the multi-platform discount on management fees while also adding each platform’s own minimum budget. We help you weigh whether a second channel is worth it.
The size of your catalog. A Shopping store with thousands of products and a sprawling feed demands far heavier feed work than a service business with a single lead form, with more attributes to manage and more spots where things can break.
The condition of your account. An account weighed down by years of clutter, dead campaigns, and broken tracking needs more cleanup upfront than a brand new build. That cleanup is usually where the early gains hide, so the effort pays for itself.
Our pricing page lays out how each service is priced, including the platform minimums and the multi-platform discount in full.
Ready to get a real number?
Google Ads questions
Straight answers to what owners ask first.
How much does Google Ads management cost? The flat fee is $499 each month. It covers the full job of running your campaigns: strategy, structure, keywords, ad creation, bidding, tracking, and monthly reporting. Your ad budget is a separate cost paid to Google, and the floor there is $1,500 monthly.
Do I pay ad spend separately? Yes. The flat $499 covers our management of the account, nothing more. Your ad budget goes straight to Google and stays outside our fee. Splitting the two this way means you can always tell what paid for management and what paid for media.
Is there a contract or a minimum? There is no long-term contract. We run month-to-month, so you can give notice and stop any time it stops making sense. The only minimum is the ad budget Google requires to run effectively, which we set at $1,500 a month.
How soon will I see results? Some clicks and a handful of conversions can land within the first weeks after launch. Steady, profitable results usually take a bit longer as the account builds up data and we prune the parts that do not pay off. You will get an honest timeline for your situation, not a promise we cannot keep.
Do I own my account and data? Yes, completely. It all lives inside your own Google Ads account, held under your name. The day we stop working together, the account, its full history, and every bit of data we built remain yours. Nothing walks out the door with us.
Do you mark up ad spend? No. The amount you budget for Google is exactly what Google receives. We do not add a percentage, resell media, or take a slice of your spend. Our only pay is the flat management fee.
Do you only do Google? No. Google tends to be the anchor, yet we also run Meta, Microsoft Ads, and other channels wherever your buyers actually spend their time. Putting two or more platforms to work also earns you 10 percent off management fees.
Are you a certified Google partner? We can pursue Google Ads certification as part of our work with you, and we are happy to talk through where our team stands. What we will not do is wave a badge around to win the deal. We would rather you judge us on how we manage the account and report the numbers.
Put your budget to work
If you are paying for Google clicks and cannot tell which ones become customers, that is the exact problem we solve. A flat $499 management fee, ad spend paid straight to Google with no markup, senior managers on your account, and no long contract tying you down.
Book a call to go through your account side by side. The full figures live on our pricing page, and the PPC hub lets you compare Google against the other platforms.