Why Monthly Google Ads Audits Matter More Than Scaling
Most Google Ads accounts don’t fail because they lack tactics.
They fail because no one stops to ask whether the system is still telling the truth.
That’s why I audit every Google Ads account monthly, before making any scaling decision.
Not to optimise.
Not to “improve performance”.
But to remove friction.
The Problem With “Always Optimising”
Most teams are constantly doing things inside the account:
- Testing new keywords
- Launching new campaigns
- Adjusting bids
- Adding assets
- Trusting automation
But very few pause to check whether the foundations are still solid.
When you skip audits, you don’t notice small issues compounding:
- Conversion signals drift
- Brand demand leaks into generic campaigns
- Automation quietly expands beyond intent
- Defaults start making decisions for you
Performance can look fine for weeks, even months.
Until it doesn’t.
And when it breaks, people assume scaling was the problem.
It wasn’t.
The problem was what you scaled on top of.
How I Think About Auditing
I don’t audit accounts by chasing tactics.
I audit by asking three questions:
1. Signals: Is the account telling the truth?
Are conversions clean?
Is attribution understood?
Are values meaningful?
Is demand real or inflated?
If signals are wrong, everything downstream breaks.
2. Structure: Can the system actually learn?
Is the brand protected?
Are campaigns segmented by intent?
Are budgets hiding performance?
Are keywords fighting each other?
If structure is messy, learning stalls.
3. System: Is automation working with boundaries?
Are auto-apply recommendations off?
Are automated assets controlled?
Are defaults reviewed, or just accepted?
Automation without guardrails isn’t scalable.
It’s deferred chaos.
Why This Has to Happen Monthly
Auditing once isn’t enough.
Accounts evolve.
Demand changes.
Teams make decisions.
Google makes changes for you.
Monthly audits stop small issues from becoming structural problems.
They don’t slow growth.
They protect it.
That’s why I turned my monthly audit into a checklist, not as a tactic, but as a habit.
If you audit monthly, you don’t get surprises later.
And If you want to audit the same way I do, you can use the checklist here.
It’s public and designed to be run monthly.