If you’re running Google Ads and wondering why your costs keep climbing while your leads stay flat, you’re not alone. Thousands of small and medium-sized businesses across Charlotte and beyond pour money into Google Ads campaigns every single month — only to watch their ad spend disappear with little to nothing to show for it.

The hard truth? Most of the time, it’s not Google’s fault. It’s preventable, fixable mistakes that quietly drain your PPC budget day after day.

At Queen City Digital, we’ve audited hundreds of Google Ads accounts for businesses in Charlotte, NC, and the surrounding areas. The same costly mistakes show up again and again. In this post, we’re going to expose all seven of them — and more importantly, show you exactly how to fix them so your Google Ads ROI starts working in your favor.

Let’s dive in.

Mistake #1: Not Using Negative Keywords (And Paying for Irrelevant Clicks)

Mistake #1 Not Using Negative Keywords (And Paying for Irrelevant Clicks)

One of the single most damaging — and most common — Google Ads mistakes is ignoring negative keywords.

Here’s what happens without them: Google shows your ad to people whose search queries are only loosely related to what you offer. If you’re a plumber running ads for “pipe repair,” you might also be showing up for searches like “DIY pipe repair,” “pipe repair videos,” or “pipe repair for free.” You pay for every click — even the ones from people who will never become your customers.

Negative keywords tell Google which searches should not trigger your ad. By building a robust negative keyword list, you immediately stop paying for irrelevant traffic and put that budget toward clicks that actually convert.

How to fix it:

  • Open your Google Ads account and go to the Search Terms report under Keywords.
  • Look for any search terms that don’t match buyer intent.
  • Add those irrelevant terms to your negative keyword list at the campaign or ad group level.
  • Do this weekly, especially during the first 90 days of a new campaign.

Pro tip: Start with broad negative categories like “free,” “DIY,” “how to,” “jobs,” and “reviews” if you’re selling a service or product that people commonly search for before making a purchase decision.

Mistake #2: Using Broad Match Keywords Without the Right Controls

Broad match keywords sound appealing because they cast a wide net — but without proper safeguards, they become one of the fastest ways to burn through your Google Ads budget.

When you use broad match, Google has enormous freedom to show your ad for searches it thinks are related to your keyword. That means if you’re targeting “HVAC services,” your ad might show for “air conditioning TikTok,” “HVAC salary,” or “HVAC school near me.” These are not your customers.

Many advertisers don’t realize they’re running broad match by default until they’ve spent hundreds — or thousands — of dollars on useless clicks.

How to fix it:

  • Audit your keyword match types immediately. Switch high-spend, low-converting broad match keywords to phrase match or exact match.
  • If you do use broad match, pair it strictly with Smart Bidding strategies and a healthy negative keyword list.
  • Use the Search Terms report regularly to catch mismatches.

The right keyword strategy balances reach with precision. Don’t let Google’s algorithm make all the decisions for you — especially when it’s spending your money.

Mistake #3: Sending All Traffic to Your Homepage

This one surprises a lot of business owners, but it’s a major conversion killer: sending every Google Ads click straight to your homepage.

Your homepage is designed to introduce your brand. It talks about everything you do for everyone. But your ad was written for a specific person searching for a specific thing. When they land on a generic homepage, there’s a disconnect — and they leave.

Dedicated landing pages match the message of your ad to a focused, friction-free page that has one job: convert that specific visitor into a lead or sale.

Think about it this way: if someone clicks an ad that says “Charlotte Emergency Plumber — Call Now,” and they land on a homepage talking about kitchen remodeling, bathroom fixtures, AND emergency plumbing buried in a menu — you’ve lost them. Your Google Ads Quality Score also suffers when landing pages don’t match ad intent, which means you pay more per click.

How to fix it:

  • Create a dedicated landing page for each major ad campaign or ad group.
  • The landing page headline should mirror the ad headline.
  • Include a clear, single call-to-action (CTA) — one button, one form, one phone number.
  • Remove navigation menus on landing pages to eliminate distractions.
  • Use A/B testing to continuously improve conversion rates.

A well-optimized landing page can double or triple your conversion rate without spending an extra dollar on clicks.

Mistake #4: Ignoring Ad Scheduling and Geographic Targeting

Are your Google Ads running at 3 AM on a Tuesday? Are they showing up in cities three states away from your service area? If you haven’t configured ad scheduling and geographic targeting, the answer is probably yes — and you’re wasting money you can’t get back.

Ad scheduling (also called dayparting) lets you control what time of day and which days of the week your ads run. For most local service businesses, leads come in during business hours — yet many campaigns run 24/7. That means you’re spending budget overnight when no one is answering the phone or responding to form submissions. By the time business hours roll around, your daily budget is already exhausted.

Geographic targeting has a similar impact. If your business serves Charlotte, Concord, and Gastonia, your ads should only appear in those areas — not in Raleigh, Asheville, or across state lines.

How to fix it:

  • Review your campaign settings and set your ads to run during the hours your team is available and most conversions happen.
  • Use your conversion data to identify which hours and days perform best — then increase bids during those windows.
  • Set your geographic targets to match your actual service area precisely.
  • Use location bid adjustments to increase bids in your highest-converting areas and decrease them in lower-performing ones.

This one change alone can dramatically improve your cost per lead and return on ad spend (ROAS).

Mistake #5: Neglecting Ad Extensions (Now Called Assets)

If your Google Ads are running without ad extensions — now officially called assets — you’re showing up smaller, less informative, and less competitive than advertisers who use them.

Ad assets are additional pieces of information you can attach to your ads: your phone number, your location, links to specific pages on your site, customer reviews, price lists, callout text, and more. They make your ad take up more real estate on the search results page and give users more reasons to click.

Google also rewards advertisers who use assets with better Quality Scores, which can lower your cost per click (CPC).

Here are the most powerful assets for local service businesses:

  • Call assets: Let users click to call you directly from the search results.
  • Sitelink assets: Direct users to specific pages (services, testimonials, contact).
  • Callout assets: Highlight key selling points (“Family-Owned,” “Free Estimates,” “Licensed & Insured”).
  • Location assets: Show your address to nearby searchers.
  • Lead form assets: Collect leads directly from the search results page.

How to fix it:

  • Log into your Google Ads account and navigate to Assets in your campaign settings.
  • Add every relevant asset type to your campaign.
  • Keep them updated — outdated phone numbers or closed location assets hurt credibility.
  • Review asset performance regularly and pause underperformers.

This is free added visibility. There’s no reason to skip it.

Mistake #6: Set-It-and-Forget-It Campaign Management

This might be the most expensive mistake of all: launching a Google Ads campaign and walking away.

Google Ads is not a vending machine. You can’t put money in, press a button, and expect the same results every week without any management. Markets change, competitors change their bids, seasonality shifts, and Google’s own algorithm evolves. A campaign that performed well in January may be hemorrhaging money in July if no one is watching it.

We see this constantly in account audits: businesses that set up campaigns months or years ago, never optimized them, and have been quietly paying inflated CPCs, chasing irrelevant traffic, and wondering why the leads dried up.

Effective Google Ads management is an ongoing process that includes:

  • Weekly: Review the Search Terms report, add negatives, pause underperforming keywords.
  • Bi-weekly: Check impression share, click-through rate (CTR), and conversion rate trends.
  • Monthly: Review and adjust bidding strategies, test new ad copy, analyze Quality Scores.
  • Quarterly: Full campaign audit — new keyword opportunities, competitor analysis, landing page refresh.

How to fix it:

  • Assign a dedicated person (internal or an agency) to actively manage your campaigns.
  • Set up automated alerts in Google Ads to flag unusual spend or performance dips.
  • Use Google Ads recommendations carefully — not every suggestion is beneficial; some will increase your spend unnecessarily.
  • Track everything in a performance dashboard so trends are visible at a glance.

If you don’t have the time or expertise to manage campaigns actively, working with a professional Google Ads management agency like Queen City Digital is almost always more cost-effective than the alternative.

Mistake #7: Not Tracking Conversions Properly (Or At All)

You cannot improve what you cannot measure. Yet a shocking number of businesses running Google Ads have broken, incomplete, or nonexistent conversion tracking.

Without proper conversion tracking, you have no idea which keywords are generating leads, which ads are driving sales, or which campaigns deserve more budget. You’re flying blind — and Google’s algorithm is also flying blind, unable to optimize your bidding toward the actions that actually matter to your business.

The most common conversion tracking mistakes include:

  • No conversion tracking set up at all — shockingly common in small business accounts.
  • Tracking only one action (like a page view) instead of true conversions (form submissions, phone calls, purchases).
  • Duplicate conversion tracking — inflating conversion numbers and skewing data.
  • Broken tracking code — usually from a website update that accidentally removed the tag.
  • Not importing Google Analytics goals into Google Ads for a complete picture.

Without accurate data, even the best-intentioned bidding strategy will optimize toward the wrong outcomes. Smart Bidding strategies like Target CPA and Target ROAS are entirely dependent on clean, accurate conversion data.

How to fix it:

  • Set up Google Ads conversion tracking via Google Tag Manager for every meaningful action: form fills, phone calls (using Google’s call tracking), purchases, and chat initiations.
  • Regularly audit your tracking with Google Tag Assistant or the Diagnostics tab in Google Ads.
  • Import Google Analytics 4 (GA4) goals into your Google Ads account.
  • Set up call tracking to capture phone leads, which are often the highest-value conversions for local service businesses.
  • Work with a team that understands Google Ads analytics deeply — because even small tracking errors can cost thousands.

The Cumulative Cost of These Mistakes

Here’s the sobering reality: most businesses aren’t making just one of these mistakes. They’re making three, four, or five of them simultaneously. Each mistake compounds the others.

Imagine running broad match keywords (Mistake #2) without negative keywords (Mistake #1), sending traffic to a generic homepage (Mistake #3), with no conversion tracking (Mistake #7), and nobody actively managing the campaign (Mistake #6). You’d have absolutely no idea what’s happening — only that money is leaving your account every day.

The good news? Every single one of these mistakes is fixable. Most can be corrected within a single focused audit session. And when you fix them, the results are often immediate and dramatic — lower cost per click, higher click-through rates, more leads, and real, measurable return on ad spend.

What to Do Next: Get a Free Google Ads Audit

If you’re unsure whether your campaigns are making these mistakes, the fastest way to find out is through a professional Google Ads audit.

At Queen City Digital, we specialize in Google Ads & PPC management for businesses in Charlotte and across the Carolinas. Our team has helped local businesses in industries ranging from home services to healthcare to legal practices turn underperforming campaigns into reliable lead-generation engines.

We’ll dig into your account, identify exactly where your budget is leaking, and give you a clear action plan to fix it — with no fluff, no jargon, and no obligation.

Contact us today to schedule your free audit and find out exactly what’s draining your budget right now.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q1: How much should a small business spend on Google Ads?

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer, but most small businesses see results starting at $1,000–$2,500/month in ad spend, depending on their industry, competition, and geographic market. High-competition industries like legal services or home improvement in competitive markets like Charlotte may require $3,000–$10,000+/month to achieve meaningful results. The key is that your Google Ads budget should be based on your target cost per lead and how many leads your business can handle — not just what’s leftover after other expenses.

Q2: What is a good click-through rate (CTR) for Google Ads?

The average Google Ads CTR across all industries is around 3–5% for search campaigns, but this varies significantly by industry. For local service businesses, a CTR of 5–10% is achievable with well-written, highly relevant ads. If your CTR is below 2%, it’s a strong signal that your ad copy, keyword targeting, or ad relevance needs improvement.

Q3: Why are my Google Ads not converting even though I’m getting clicks?

Clicks without conversions usually point to a landing page problem, a targeting mismatch, or an offer/message disconnect. If people click your ad but don’t fill out a form or call, ask yourself: Does my landing page clearly match what the ad promised? Is the call-to-action obvious? Is the page loading fast on mobile? Is there unnecessary friction (too many fields, too much navigation, unclear value proposition)? Fixing the landing page experience is almost always the highest-leverage optimization you can make.

Q4: Should I let Google manage my bids automatically?

Automated bidding (Smart Bidding) can be powerful — but only when you have sufficient conversion data. Google recommends at least 30–50 conversions per month for Smart Bidding strategies like Target CPA or Target ROAS to work effectively. If you’re just starting out or have low conversion volume, Manual CPC or Enhanced CPC gives you more control while you build data. Handing full control to Google before the algorithm has enough data to learn from is a common and costly mistake.

Q5: How long does it take for Google Ads to work?

Most campaigns need 60–90 days to fully optimize. The first month is typically a learning phase — Google’s algorithm is gathering data, testing which users convert, and adjusting delivery. You should start seeing initial results (clicks, impressions, some leads) within the first two weeks, but meaningful optimization and cost efficiency usually come after consistent management over two to three months. Patience paired with active campaign management is the winning formula.