A “Scalable” Google Ads Account Isn’t Built by Scaling
It’s Built by Auditing (Relentlessly)
I promise you this:
If I audit a Google Ads account that’s “ready to scale,”
I can always find at least 5 things that would make it more scalable.
And yes, I’m going to tell you something in secret 🤐
I’ve audited hundreds of Google Ads accounts.
From small brands to serious spenders.
And I always find the same thing:
The most impactful issues are also the most obvious ones.
Not fancy hacks.
Not new betas.
Not “one weird trick.”
Just fundamentals that were missed, forgotten, or assumed to be “fine.”
Audit Your Audit (Every Month)
Your Google Ads audit shouldn’t be a one-time event.
It should be an ongoing habit.
Because here’s the truth:
You don’t clean your house once and expect it to stay clean forever.
If you’re anything like me, neat (my partner calls it OCD 😅)
you clean weekly. Sometimes twice a week.
Not because something broke.
But because entropy is real.
Google Ads works the same way.
Just because:
- Performance looks stable
- ROAS is “acceptable”
- Spend is hitting targets
does not mean the account is healthy.
Accounts decay quietly.
And if someone external audits your account and finds obvious issues,
that’s not a Google problem, that’s a process problem.
The 5 Things I See Over and Over (And Fix First)
Here are five changes I consistently make that unlock scale without increasing spend.
1. Turn Auto-Apply Off. Permanently.
Auto-applied recommendations are not optimisation.
They’re delegation without context.
Google doesn’t know:
- Your margin structure
- Your inventory risks
- Your customer LTV
- Your acquisition constraints
Leaving auto-apply on is like saying:
“Here’s the budget. Do whatever you want.”
If you want control, auto-apply has to go.
2. Disable Automated Asset Creation (With One Exception)
Create your own assets.
Headlines.
Descriptions.
Extensions.
Because automated assets often:
- Dilute your message
- Break compliance
- Create inconsistency across touchpoints
Exception: Seller Ratings.
If you have strong reviews, keep them on.
They’re one of the few automated assets that:
- Aren’t fully controllable manually
- Add real trust at scale
- Improve CTR without harming intent
Everything else? Own it.
3. Add Negative Pages to DSA Campaigns
Dynamic Search Ads can be powerful.
They can also quietly waste spend.
FAQ pages.
Shipping pages.
Returns pages.
Policy pages.
If these aren’t excluded, Google will happily serve ads against them.
DSA should capture commercial intent, not curiosity.
This is one of the easiest wins, and one of the most commonly missed.
4. Use In-Market & Affinity Audiences (They’re Free)
Audience signals don’t restrict reach, they inform bidding.
You’re not “narrowing” performance by using them.
You’re giving the algorithm context.
If Google offers intent signals for free, use them.
They help:
- Speed up learning
- Stabilise performance
- Improve early-stage efficiency
Ignoring them is leaving a signal on the table.
5. Stop Running Smart Bidding Without Boundaries
(This is the one I’d change)
The issue isn’t Maximise Conversions or Maximise Conversion Value.
The issue is running them without a target.
No tCPA.
No tROAS.
No guardrails.
That’s not optimisation, that’s abdication.
Smart bidding needs constraints to:
- Learn efficiently
- Protect margins
- Scale sustainably
Otherwise, you’re just telling Google:
“Spend the money. I don’t care how.”
And trust me, it will.
Why This Actually Matters
Most accounts don’t fail because they weren’t scaled fast enough.
They fail because:
- Fundamentals eroded quietly
- Systems weren’t maintained
- Assumptions replaced audits
Scaling doesn’t start with more budget.
It starts with clarity, control, and consistency.
Audit your audit.
Make it monthly.
Make it boring.
Make it non-negotiable.
Because the most expensive problems
are usually the ones you thought were already solved.
Scaling doesn’t start with more budget.
It starts with fewer blind spots.
Most Google Ads accounts don’t need a new strategy.
They need discipline.
Auditing isn’t busywork.
It’s how you protect performance, margins, and momentum.
At Conkai, we don’t scale chaos.
We remove friction first — then we apply pressure.
Because sustainable growth isn’t about doing more.
It’s about seeing clearly.
If you’re serious about scaling, start there.