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Google AdWords

How much is a reasonable amount to pay for someone to manage my Google Adwords program?

I managed my program for years on my own but the effectiveness is declining and I'm being approached by 'experts' who want to take care of it for a monthly fee. What is reasonable and what should I look out for?

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Answers

Stoney deGeyter

Author, Speaker, CEO

Since you have experience managing the account, you have a general idea of how much time you spend on it. Hiring an expert may or may not need more hours, than what you have been investing, but that is something you can suss out in a conversation and after they review the account.

Once you know how much time they'll spend then you just need to determine an amount that offers them fair value for their time based on their level of experience. You can either choose to pay them by the hour or you can do a percentage model.

As an agency, we charge a percentage of ad spend. In general, every thousand dollars of ad spend requires an hour's worth of work. This is non-exact as it also depends on how much testing and landing page optimization is being done, but it's a good rule of thumb.

The percentage, however gives us incentive to keep the spend profitable and ensure the client sees a solid ROI. The better the ROI the more they are likely to spend, which increases our income and gives us more hours to optimize the campaign for better performance.

The trick is to never increase your budget if you're not getting good ROI out of it.

Of course, campaigns that start on small budgets are trickier because they need time and data in order to be optimized. If your ad spend is low then consider paying hourly until the campaign is improved enough to increase your spend and move to a percentage model.

Here's an article on pay-for-performance models: http://marketingland.com/love-pay-performance-seo-wont-heres-209555. It focuses on SEO, but many of the same principles apply to PPC.

Answered about 7 years ago

Ixone Isasi

Digital Marketing and Performance Marketing Expert

It all depends on the budget. It can go from a 20% to 35% of your paid media cost. The percentage might vary depending on the budget, if the campaign needs to be built from scratch (which is not your case), if it needs a major optimization or you are not using latest Google/Bing trends.
Feel free to contact me if you need a free audit and quote.

Answered about 7 years ago

Igor Belogolovsky

Digital marketing expert.

Honestly, it depends on the quality/depth of service you're looking for and how extensive your AdWords program is.

I've written this up in detail on Quora: https://www.quora.com/How-much-does-a-good-Adwords-consultant-cost/answer/Igor-Belogolovsky-1

But I'll give you the highlights:

- You can probably get someone mediocre for a few hundred bucks a month, but it may not be much better than optimizing on your own

- You can hire a variety of skilled agencies or hourly consultants for a few grand a month

- If you want top talent and have a significant budget, expect to pay as much as $5k to $30k per month

Good luck!

Igor

Answered about 7 years ago

Noah Omri

Cross-Channel Digital Marketing Expert

I've worked on the Agency side for the last 8 years and it really depends on your spend levels and the complexity of what you're trying to achieve. At the least you'll be looking at $1,000/mo for someone (likely a contractor or small shop) who will spend real time on your account and that will scale up if you're spending more than $10,000. Agencies usually have minimums of $1-5,000/mo depending on their own size. Feel free to message me if this was helpful and you'd like to know more.

Answered almost 7 years ago

Oriol Huesa

eCommerce & digital marketing advisor

Honestly, i would not pay anything like an hourly/monthly fee, or at least not 100% on this. It should always be linked to results (% of margin, growth, etc), so that the manager is focused on improving the performance and earns direct benefit from it. I'm currently working as an Adwords consultant for a company and our agreement is x% of the net margin (margin - adwords investment)

Answered almost 7 years ago