Google’s AI is like a very eager intern: powerful, fast, and dangerous if you give it the wrong target. If you tell it that every form fill is ‘success’, it will happily drown you in junk leads.
Most Google Ads accounts are optimised for clicks. Some are optimised for form fills. Very few are optimised for what actually matters: qualified opportunities that turn into paying customers.
Closing that gap — between click and closed deal — is what separates a Google Ads strategy from a Google Ads account.
Map Your Lead Journey: From Search To Signed Contract
Before you touch a single campaign setting, map the journey:
- Search: What exact phrase does your ideal customer type when they’re ready to buy?
- Ad: What does your ad promise, and does that promise match the search?
- Landing Page: Does the page fulfil the ad’s promise immediately?
- Conversion: How do they enquire — form, call, chat, booking?
- Follow-up: What happens in the first 60 seconds after they enquire?
- Qualification: How do you determine if this is a genuine opportunity?
- Sale: What’s your close rate, and how does it vary by lead source?
Most Google Ads accounts only track to ‘conversion’ (step 5). The best accounts track all the way to ‘sale’ (step 7) — and feed that data back into Google’s algorithm.
Choosing The Right Conversion Actions (Calls, Forms, Bookings)
Not all conversions are equal. A phone call from someone who’s ready to book is worth far more than a form fill from someone comparing prices.
Set up multiple conversion actions and assign them different values:
- Phone call (60+ seconds): High value — assign $200+ in conversion value
- Form submission (with qualification questions): Medium-high value
- Booking/scheduling: High value — clear buying intent
- Contact page visit: Low value — exploratory, not sales-ready
When you assign values to conversions, Google can optimise toward the actions most likely to generate real revenue — not just activity.
Why You Must Track ‘Qualified Leads’, Not Just Form Fills
Volume is the enemy of quality if you’re measuring the wrong thing.
A campaign generating 50 form fills per month sounds great. If your sales team is closing 2 of them, and the other 48 are tyre-kickers, price-shoppers, and wrong-number enquiries, your campaign is efficiently generating waste.
The fix: connect your CRM to your Google Ads account. Mark leads as ‘qualified’ when your sales team deems them a genuine opportunity. Import that data back into Google Ads as an offline conversion.
Now Google’s algorithm is optimising toward qualified leads — not just any leads. This single change transforms the quality of most lead gen campaigns within 60–90 days.
What you measure is what Google optimises for. Measure carefully.
Value-Based Bidding: Teaching Google Which Leads Matter Most
Value-based bidding takes offline conversion import one step further. Instead of telling Google ‘this conversion happened’, you tell Google ‘this conversion is worth $X.’
For service businesses, this might look like:
- Commercial enquiry from a business with 50+ employees: $500 value
- Residential enquiry within your core service area: $200 value
- Enquiry with clear project brief and ready timeline: $300 value
- Enquiry with no budget, no timeline, ‘just exploring’: $20 value
Google’s Smart Bidding then adjusts bids in real-time to prioritise the searches most likely to generate high-value enquiries. It’s not magic — it’s data. But given enough of it, the results are significant.
Using Geo-Targeting To Focus On Your Best Suburbs
Not all locations are equal. A home builder in Brisbane may find that leads from suburbs with median house prices above $800,000 close at twice the rate of leads from lower-value areas.
Use your CRM data to identify:
- Which suburbs generate your highest-value customers?
- Which locations have the shortest sales cycle?
- Which postcodes have the lowest CPL and highest close rate?
Then increase bids in those locations by 20–50% and reduce bids (or exclude) in underperforming areas. This is geo-bid adjustment — one of the most underused tools in Google Ads for local businesses.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is ‘value-based bidding’ and do I need it?
Value-based bidding tells Google’s algorithm which types of leads are worth more to your business, allowing it to bid more aggressively for high-value opportunities. It requires offline conversion tracking data to work effectively. Most businesses generating 50+ leads per month should explore it.
Q: How do I connect my CRM to Google Ads?
Most major CRMs (Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoho, etc.) have native Google Ads integrations or can connect via Zapier. Your Google Ads account has an ‘Offline Conversions’ feature under Tools > Conversions. Your agency should be able to set this up within a few hours.
Q: How long does it take for Google’s algorithm to optimise for lead quality?
Typically 60–90 days after you start importing qualified lead data. The algorithm needs at least 30 conversion events per month to optimise effectively. Early results may not reflect the full quality improvement — patience is required.
Q: Should every form fill count as a conversion?
In the early stages, yes — you need data. Once you have 90+ days of lead data and can identify patterns (which sources generate qualified leads vs. noise), start assigning different values or creating separate conversion actions for different lead qualities.
Q: Can I use Google Ads for B2B lead generation?
Absolutely. B2B lead gen on Google Ads typically has higher CPCs and lower volume than B2C, but the lead values are also significantly higher. The key is targeting high-intent, commercial-intent keywords and using landing pages with specific B2B value propositions.