Google Search campaigns | April 2026

Inspired Builders paid search is now cleaner, better protected, and ready for a cleaner lead test.

This report summarizes the latest campaign health check in a lighter client-facing view: what changed, what is improving, and what we are watching next.

Spend reviewed
$2,461
Latest 30-day Google Ads API report
Search clicks
221
Kitchen + garage campaigns
Average CPC
$11.14
Weighted across both campaigns
Recorded leads
0
Primary lead form and call conversions in this report window
01 | Executive view

The campaign is still early, but the foundation is materially stronger than it was a week ago.

The honest read is simple: lead volume is not where it needs to be yet. The productive part is that the major sources of waste and uncertainty have now been addressed. Tracking has been validated, the landing page form was simplified, ad messaging was refreshed, and the account now has a much stronger negative keyword shield around it.

Improved

Traffic quality is being tightened.

A material share of early kitchen clicks came from cabinet, material, showroom, bathroom, and idea-research searches. Those patterns are now being filtered more aggressively.

Validated

The lead path has been tested end-to-end.

Production tests confirmed the form, CRM contact creation, Google Ads primary conversion labels, GA4 event, and thank-you flow are firing as expected.

Watching

The next read is about real homeowners.

The next 7 to 14 days should show whether cleaner search traffic and a lower-friction phone consult offer start producing qualified form fills.

02 | Work completed

Optimization work completed before this client report.

This is the client-safe version of the internal change history. It focuses on the operational improvements that matter for performance, without exposing internal diagnostics or technical cleanup language.

Apr 28

Landing page form simplified into a lead-first phone consult flow.

Kitchen and garage pages now ask for name, phone, and email first, then collect optional project details afterward. This reduces the commitment level of the first step and gives the sales team a durable contact sooner.

Apr 28

Material and cabinet shopper traffic was filtered out more aggressively.

A new shared negative keyword list was added to both campaigns, and four broad phrase keywords that were attracting non-remodeling intent were paused while exact-match opportunities stayed active.

Apr 23-28

Tracking was production-validated for both kitchen and garage.

Test submissions confirmed CRM contact creation, Google Ads primary conversions, enhanced conversion data, GA4 form events, and thank-you routing. Future analysis can focus more confidently on traffic quality and offer fit.

Apr 21-23

Bidding was stabilized around a controlled Max Clicks test.

Both campaigns are running with market-calibrated CPC ceilings: $20 for Kitchen and $18 for Garage. The goal is to collect clean data without letting costs float unchecked during the recovery window.

Apr 2026

Ads and extensions were refreshed for stronger proof and relevance.

Responsive search ads were rewritten, callouts and structured snippets were added, and trust signals such as reviews, Houzz awards, and BBB accreditation were brought forward where relevant.

03 | Campaign performance

The campaign generated meaningful search activity, but not enough lead action yet.

These figures are from the latest 30-day internal health check, generated April 28, 2026. The April 27 week was only two days old at report time, so the full-week comparison below focuses on April 13 and April 20.

4,877
Impressions
221
Clicks
4.53%
CTR
$11.14
Avg CPC
Campaign Spend Clicks CTR Avg CPC Primary conv.
Kitchen - San Jose Bay Area $1,861.16 189 4.31% $9.85 0
Garage Conversion - San Jose Bay Area $599.87 32 6.49% $18.75 0
Client read: the account has enough click volume to evaluate the offer, but not enough lead response yet. The next phase is designed to spend against cleaner search terms and a simpler consult request before making larger budget or campaign expansion decisions.
04 | Positive movement

Several auction signals improved after optimization.

Search campaigns often need a short stabilization period after bid, tracking, and keyword updates. The most useful early signals are whether the account is becoming more visible and whether wasted rank pressure is easing.

Kitchen: stronger auction position week over week.

Clicks
53 to 115
Impressions
1,111 to 2,794
Lost to rank
75.8% to 44.9%

Lower lost-rank means the campaign was less often held back by auction competitiveness during the week of April 20.

Garage: visibility and click efficiency improved.

Clicks
4 to 21
Search share
29.6% to 47.7%
Avg CPC
$30.46 to $14.04

Garage is smaller volume, but the latest full-week data showed more visibility at a lower average click cost.

05 | Traffic cleanup

The account now has a much stronger quality filter.

The client-facing takeaway is that early campaign data exposed where Google was over-broad, and we used that information to tighten the account.

645
Active negative keyword protections

Includes campaign-level, ad-group-level, and shared-list protections across the active search campaigns.

37
Material and cabinet shopper filters

Added to reduce spend from searches looking for standalone cabinets, countertops, showrooms, or materials.

49
Bathroom service exclusions

Protects the kitchen campaign from adjacent bathroom searches while kitchen and garage remain the active paid-search focus.

Early search pattern Client-safe interpretation Optimization response
Cabinets, countertops, showrooms Too many searches were for parts and browsing, not full remodel consultations. New shared negative list plus phrase keyword pauses.
Bathroom-adjacent searches Some searches crossed into services we are not actively scaling in paid search yet. Bathroom exclusion list attached to active campaigns.
DIY and idea-stage queries Some users were researching inspiration rather than looking to hire. Weekly search-term review and root-pattern negatives.
06 | What we are watching next

The next checkpoint is not about more changes. It is about cleaner evidence.

After a round of major cleanup, the best move is to let the improved structure collect enough data to make a clear decision. The current Max Clicks read window runs to May 7, 2026 unless a hard tracking or compliance issue appears.

May 7 checkpoint

By the May 7 review, we want to see whether the cleaner setup has produced real lead form submissions or qualifying phone activity. If lead volume remains at zero, we will have enough evidence to make a stronger landing page, offer, budget, or bidding decision.

Win zone
3+
Qualified leads by checkpoint
Caution zone
1-2
Slow budget and inspect quality
Decision zone
0
Rework offer/CRO or strategy
  • Lead response Are real homeowners submitting the simplified consult form?
  • Search-term quality Does the material/cabinet cleanup reduce wasted kitchen spend?
  • Kitchen budget pressure Kitchen started to hit budget limits after rank improved; we will not increase spend until lead response supports it.
  • Garage conversion intent Garage clicks are expensive, so we are watching whether high-intent ADU and permit queries turn into conversations.
  • Conversion diagnostics Enhanced conversions should move from "needs data" to recording after the first real lead.
07 | Plain-English summary

Where things stand today.

This is the short version to share in a client conversation: we are not claiming victory on lead volume yet, but the work completed this week gives the campaign a much cleaner chance to prove itself.

The positive story

The account is better built than it was before: tracking is validated, the landing page asks for less up front, ads have been refreshed, and the negative keyword structure is significantly stronger. Early auction indicators also improved in several places.

The honest caveat

The campaigns still need to prove they can produce qualified leads at an acceptable cost. The next checkpoint will tell us whether the cleanup is enough, or whether we need a deeper offer, landing page, or bidding adjustment.