Google Ads Management - You Don't Need a $10K/Month Agency

Published Feb 10, 2026 · 6 min read

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Common Questions

Yes, and for a lot of businesses it makes sense to. If you're spending under $5,000 a month and have the time to learn the platform properly, managing campaigns in-house can absolutely work. The traps people fall into are relying on Google's automated recommendations, not tracking conversions correctly, and not maintaining negative keyword lists. Get those three things right and you'll outperform most agencies charging small account fees.
Once you're spending $10,000 or more per month, the cost of bad decisions starts to add up fast. At that level, a good specialist typically pays for themselves in the first month just by cleaning up waste. Below that, the math is harder. It really comes down to whether you have the time to manage it properly yourself. Half-managed campaigns usually perform worse than either a professional running them or no campaigns at all.
Honestly? Often not much more than someone charging $2,000. The difference is usually account size, overhead, and brand name, not actual performance. What you're paying for should be active campaign management, regular bid adjustments, landing page feedback, conversion tracking audits, and real strategic thinking about where to grow. If you're paying $10K a month and getting a monthly report and a quarterly call, that's a problem.
A reasonable rule of thumb is 10% to 20% of your ad spend going to management, with a minimum floor that covers the actual work. At $10,000 in ad spend, paying $1,500 to $2,000 for management is reasonable. At $100,000 in ad spend, you shouldn't be paying percentage-based fees at all. Flat-rate pricing makes more sense at scale because the work doesn't increase proportionally with spend, and percentage models create bad incentives.
Broken or missing conversion tracking. I've seen this hundreds of times across 400+ accounts. If you don't know which clicks are turning into customers, you can't optimize for anything that matters. Google's algorithm needs conversion signals to work correctly. Without them, you're flying blind and your automated bidding is optimizing for clicks instead of customers. Fix your tracking before you touch anything else in the account.
Work backwards from your margins. Figure out the maximum you can pay to acquire a customer and still be profitable, then compare that to your actual cost per acquisition in the account. If your target CPA is $50 and you're paying $80, you're losing money. If you're paying $30, you should be scaling. Most businesses don't actually know their target CPA, which is why they can't tell if their ads are working. Start there before worrying about anything else.
It depends on your category and margins. High-intent searches in competitive verticals like legal, financial services, and home services can work well even at lower budgets because the keywords signal strong purchase intent. Low-margin product categories with high CPCs are much harder to make work. The question to ask is: what's the lifetime value of a customer, and what CPC would I need to stay profitable? If the math works, Google Ads is worth testing. If it doesn't, no amount of optimization will fix the fundamentals.