Clicks to Customers: The Case for Single-Objective Campaigns
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About this listen
In this episode, I break down one of the most common mistakes I see in Google Ads accounts: trying to make one campaign do too many things.
I explain why campaigns should have one clear objective — not calls, form fills, store visits, and purchases all mixed together — and how blending goals confuses the algorithm and kills performance.
Using real client examples from a medical center and a live entertainment business, I walk through:
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Why campaign prioritization matters more than tactics
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How mixing conversions (calls, store visits, clicks) dilutes results
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Why “ringing the register” should be the primary goal for revenue-driven accounts
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How simplifying conversion actions dramatically improved performance
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The danger of weekend-only vs weekday-only campaigns
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Why ad scheduling and bid adjustments outperform split campaigns
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How removing low-intent traffic (like late-night “zombie clicks”) improves lead quality
I also share a high-level breakdown of how I use time-on-site, scroll depth, and high-intent keywords to identify real buyers — not bots or low-quality clicks — and how that strategy led to stronger conversions and better call quality without relying on click-to-call ads.
The core takeaway: Every campaign should do one job extremely well. When you stop confusing the algorithm and focus on one clear conversion goal, performance improves fast.