The 10-Minute Google Ads Check-In Every Busy Business Owner Needs
Managing Google Ads campaigns can feel overwhelming when you are running a business, managing staff, speaking with clients, and trying to grow revenue all at the same time. Most business owners simply do not have hours every week to sit inside Google Ads diagnosing fluctuations in performance.
The problem is that campaign performance rarely stays perfectly stable.
Your cost per conversion might usually fluctuate within a healthy range, which is completely normal. However, when performance suddenly spikes or drops dramatically, small issues can quickly turn into expensive problems if they are not identified early enough.
The good news is that you do not need to spend hours managing your account every week.
With a structured 10-minute Google Ads check-in, you can spot issues before they become serious, maintain campaign stability, and identify opportunities to scale your account effectively.
Here are the five key areas you should review every single week.
1. Check Your Search Terms Report
Your search terms report is one of the most important reports inside Google Ads.
It shows the actual search queries users typed into Google before clicking your ads. These are the real-world searches triggering your campaigns.
Even if you use exact match keywords, Google can still expand beyond the strict meaning of your keywords to match what it believes are relevant user searches.
That means irrelevant traffic can still enter your account.
Why This Matters
Poor search term matching can lead to:
- Wasted ad spend
- Lower conversion rates
- Increased cost per lead
- Reduced campaign efficiency
Even long-standing campaigns with years of stable performance can suddenly begin matching to strange or irrelevant search terms.
This is why regular monitoring is essential.
Using AI to Speed Up Search Term Analysis
If you manage a large account with thousands of search terms, manually reviewing them can become time-consuming.
A simple AI workflow can dramatically speed up this process.
Step 1: Upload Your Keyword List to ChatGPT
Start by prompting ChatGPT with something like:
“I’m running a Google Ads campaign. These are the positive keywords we are actively bidding on. Please understand exactly what we are targeting and wait for further instructions.”
Upload your keyword list.
Step 2: Upload Search Terms Data
Next, upload your search terms report and ask ChatGPT to categorise the search terms into:
- Relevant
- Potentially irrelevant
- Highly irrelevant
This gives you a structured framework for reviewing the data quickly.
Why Categorisation Helps
You should never blindly trust AI outputs.
By grouping terms into categories, you can quickly verify whether the AI is understanding your business correctly.
Typically:
- Highly irrelevant terms should be added as negative keywords
- Relevant terms can remain active
- Potentially irrelevant terms may require further analysis
This process can save hours every month while keeping your campaigns tightly focused.
2. Review Your Auction Insights Report
Auction Insights is one of the most overlooked reports in Google Ads.
This report shows how your competitors are behaving in the same auctions as you.
It provides insights into:
- Impression share
- Competitor overlap
- Outranking share
- Position changes
- Competitive aggression
Why Competitor Behaviour Matters
Sometimes campaign performance changes are not caused by your account at all.
For example:
- Competitors may increase bids aggressively
- New advertisers may enter the market
- Existing competitors may reduce spend
- Seasonal competition may increase
All of these factors can directly impact your:
- CPCs
- Impression share
- Conversion volume
- Cost per acquisition
What to Look For
During your weekly check-in, compare auction insights week over week.
Ask yourself:
- Have competitors become more aggressive?
- Are impression shares declining?
- Are CPCs increasing?
- Has a competitor disappeared from auctions?
These small trends can often explain sudden changes in performance before you start making unnecessary campaign adjustments.
3. Monitor Budget Pacing
Budget pacing is one of the fastest ways to identify hidden campaign issues.
Most advertisers only notice problems after performance has already declined significantly.
Monitoring pacing helps you spot issues early.
What Is Budget Pacing?
Budget pacing simply means comparing:
- Your intended daily spend
- Your actual daily spend
For example:
- Daily budget: £50
- Actual spend: £50
Everything is healthy.
But what happens when Google suddenly spends only £20 per day?
That usually indicates a deeper issue.
Common Causes of Under-Spending
1. CPA Targets Are Too Restrictive
If your target CPA is unrealistic, Google may become hesitant to enter auctions.
The platform effectively limits reach because it believes conversions cannot be achieved profitably.
2. ROAS Targets Are Too Aggressive
The same principle applies to eCommerce campaigns using Target ROAS bidding.
If your ROAS target is too high, Google restricts traffic volume.
How to Track Budget Pacing
Create a simple spreadsheet showing:
- Date
- Daily spend
- Target daily spend
- Variance
This allows you to quickly identify:
- Overspending
- Under-spending
- Performance trends
The earlier you catch pacing problems, the easier they are to fix.
4. Review CPA or ROAS Performance
This is the metric most advertisers check first.
However, it is important not to overreact to short-term fluctuations.
Performance Always Fluctuates
No Google Ads account produces perfectly consistent results every week.
For example:
| Week | CPA |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | £60 |
| Week 2 | £40 |
| Week 3 | £50 |
Even though performance fluctuated, the average CPA still aligns with the £50 target.
This is completely normal.
Avoid Knee-Jerk Reactions
One of the biggest mistakes advertisers make is adjusting bidding strategies too quickly.
Do not:
- Change CPA targets after one bad week
- Panic after short-term fluctuations
- Constantly reset bidding algorithms
Instead, review trends over a longer timeframe.
Recommended Review Window
Look back:
- 6–8 weeks minimum
- Longer during seasonal periods
- Longer for low-volume accounts
This gives you a much clearer understanding of whether performance is genuinely declining or simply fluctuating normally.
Questions to Ask
During your review, ask:
- Are results consistently worsening?
- Has CPA drifted upward over time?
- Are ROAS targets still achievable?
- Are fluctuations seasonal?
This context helps you make smarter optimisation decisions.
5. Plan Your Next Scaling Experiment
The final part of your weekly check-in should focus on growth opportunities.
Not just protecting performance.
Scaling Requires Testing
Most lead generation campaigns begin with:
- Exact match keywords
- Conservative targeting
- Tight control
Once campaigns mature and collect significant conversion data, scaling opportunities emerge.
The Typical Scaling Path
A common progression might look like:
- Exact match
- Broad match
- Performance Max
- Advanced automation testing
However, the key is to test gradually.
Never Scale Everything at Once
One of the biggest mistakes advertisers make is launching multiple experiments simultaneously.
Do not:
- Switch all keywords to broad match
- Launch Performance Max immediately
- Change bidding strategies and targeting together
Instead:
- Test one variable at a time
- Measure results carefully
- Allow enough time for learning
Example Scaling Strategy
If you currently use exact match:
- Launch one broad match ad group
- Monitor incremental conversions
- Evaluate quality and CPA
- Expand only if results improve
If successful, then you can explore additional campaign types later.
Important Reminder
Not every scaling test will work.
And that is perfectly fine.
Good account management is not about forcing scale at all costs.
It is about testing intelligently, learning from data, and gradually expanding what works.
Final Thoughts
You do not need to spend hours every week managing your Google Ads campaigns effectively.
A structured 10-minute weekly review can help you:
- Spot performance issues early
- Reduce wasted ad spend
- Monitor competitor behaviour
- Improve budget efficiency
- Identify scaling opportunities
Most importantly, consistency matters more than complexity.
Small, regular check-ins are far more valuable than ignoring your campaigns for months and then trying to fix major problems after performance collapses.
If you follow this simple weekly process, you will stay ahead of most Google Ads issues long before they become expensive problems.
