When a $7 Difference Becomes A $8,400 Savings
Alright readers, I’m going to get a little web nerdy today. Specifically geeky about Google AdWords. Unfortunately, there will be no discussion of tater tots. And probably no dry sarcasm. Well… maybe a little. About four months ago, I took on a new client and stepped into their Google advertising account.
In my world, I see this all the time:
Someone sets up Google Ads.
They pick some keywords.
They hit “Start.”
And that’s it.
But Google Ads doesn’t work that way. Not unless you have an unlimited budget and don’t mind donating generously to Google’s quarterly earnings report. Paid search isn’t a “set it and forget it” platform. It’s a tuning platform. It requires constant adjustment — tightening keywords, refining match types, adding negatives, adjusting bids, studying conversion paths, filtering junk traffic, and repeating that cycle over and over.
Over the past few months, I worked on fine-tuning the campaign structure. Nothing dramatic. No fireworks. Just disciplined adjustments. Then yesterday, as I was pulling the report together, I saw a win.
Seven dollars.
Now you might be thinking:
“Ryan… we’re excited about seven dollars?”
Yes.
When we’re talking about cost per conversion, seven dollars is a big deal.
What Is Cost Per Conversion (And Why Should You Care)?
Cost per conversion is simple math: How much does it cost to generate one actual lead? Not a click. Not a website visitor. An actual inquiry. A real action. A measurable conversion.
If it costs $34 to generate a lead, and through optimization you bring that down to $27, you’ve just improved efficiency by $7 per lead.
That’s the number I saw. Seven dollars doesn’t sound like much — until you multiply it. This account averages roughly 100 conversions per month.
$7 x 100 = $700 per month
$700 x 12 = $8,400 per year
Same market. Same business. Same ad platform. Just tighter execution.
Google Ads rewards attention. It rewards discipline. It rewards operators who treat it like a system, not a slot machine. And sometimes the biggest wins aren’t the loud ones. They’re the quiet ones hiding in the math.
