"Google Ads management service" covers everything from a script that logs in once a week to a senior strategist rebuilding your entire conversion architecture. The price can be identical. The results are not. Here's what real management actually includes, and how to tell the difference before you sign.
What a real management service includes
| Component | What it means | Often missing from cheap services? |
|---|---|---|
| Account architecture | Campaign + ad-group structure mapped to buyer intent | Sometimes |
| Conversion tracking | Correct setup, no double-counting, validated | Often |
| Offline conversion imports | CRM data (MQL/SQL/closed-won) fed back to Google | Usually missing |
| Bid + budget management | Ongoing Smart Bidding tuning against the right goal | No |
| Search-term + negative-keyword maintenance | Weekly review, cutting wasted spend | Often skipped |
| Ad copy + asset testing | Responsive Search Ad variety, asset refresh | Sometimes |
| Landing-page / CRO input | The page after the click, not just the click | Usually missing |
| Revenue-tied reporting | Cost per customer, not just clicks/CPL | Often vanity-only |
| Senior strategist on the account | The person deciding is experienced | The #1 gap |
The components in bold are where cheap services quietly fall short, and they happen to be the ones that most affect results.
The pricing models
- Percentage of spend (15-25%): scales with your budget. Common and fair, but watch for the incentive to push you to spend more.
- Flat retainer ($1,000-$5,000+/mo): predictable; better-aligned because the fee doesn't rise just because you increased budget.
- Setup fee + retainer: an upfront build fee covers the initial architecture, then ongoing management.
For a $10,000/month account, real management runs roughly $1,500-$2,500/month. Services under $500/month are almost always script-driven with no senior involvement. This is fine if you only need the lights kept on, and inadequate if the account's performance moves your revenue. We break down all four models, tier-by-tier numbers, and the fee structures that work against you in the full PPC management pricing guide.
The four questions that separate real management from dashboard-watching
- "Who runs my account day-to-day, a senior strategist or a junior?" The person who sold you the engagement should be the one in the account, or close to it.
- "Do you import offline conversions from my CRM?" If they optimize on form-fills instead of closed revenue, Smart Bidding finds you form-fillers, not customers. This is the single highest-leverage thing a management service does, and the most commonly skipped.
- "Do you own conversion tracking and give landing-page input?" Managing campaigns while ignoring the conversion path and the tracking leaves most of the value on the table.
- "Is it month-to-month, and do I own my account?" Long lock-in contracts and agency-held accounts are red flags. You should be able to leave, and take your account with you.
If a service can't answer #2 clearly, that tells you most of what you need to know. They're probably charging agency rates for what Google's auto-recommendations do for free.
How we run management at MyLeadsFactory
A senior strategist runs your account directly. We wire offline conversions from your CRM on day one, own the tracking and CRO input, report on cost-per-customer rather than vanity clicks, and work month-to-month with no lock-in. You always own your account. The five pillars (Strategy, CRO, SEO & AEO, Paid Media, Social) run under one team so the work compounds instead of fragmenting.
Book a free 30-minute audit: a senior strategist reviews your current setup and sends a recorded Loom walkthrough you keep, whether or not you hire us.