If your website is open for business but traffic feels like a quiet Tuesday afternoon, Google Ads is how you flip the sign to “we’re busy”. This article walks you through what to expect, what to budget, how long it takes, and how campaigns evolve from first clicks to repeat customers.
A Google Ads campaign is not a switch you flip once. It is a system that learns. At the start, your account is set up with tracking, keyword research, audience signals, and a clear conversion goal. Then the campaign goes live and starts collecting data.
In the first weeks, performance can move around. That is normal. The platform is testing who responds, when they respond, and which searches bring results. During this phase, you can expect regular tweaks. Bids get adjusted, keywords are refined, and ads are tested against each other.
By the end of the first cycle, you should have:
- clear data on what people search
- early conversion patterns
- a sense of cost per lead or sale
- a shortlist of what works and what wastes spend

Minimum budget and timeline for a first campaign
Let’s talk numbers and patience.
Budget
For a meaningful start, a minimum of R5,000 to R10,000 per month in ad spend is recommended. Lower than that and the data pool is too small. You want enough clicks to learn, not guess.
Timeline
Give your first campaign at least 6 to 8 weeks.
Week 1 to 2 is setup and learning.
Week 3 to 6 is optimisation.
After that, decisions start to feel grounded rather than hopeful.
If you stop too early, it is like judging a movie after the opening scene.
The first Google Ads campaign sets the stage
Your first Google Ads campaign is not just about sales. It is about discovery. This is where we identify:
- your best performing audiences
- which locations respond
- which devices convert
- which keywords bring intent, not just traffic
It also builds your remarketing audiences. These are people who visited your site but did not convert. Later, you can target them again with tailored ads. Think of it as a second chance, but smarter.
Types of Google Ads campaigns and when to use them
Each campaign type has a job. Picking the right one depends on your website and goals.
Search Campaigns
These show on Google search results.
Best for service businesses, lead generation, and high intent searches.
If someone is searching “plumber near me”, this is your lane.
Display Campaigns
Banner ads across websites.
Good for brand awareness and remarketing.
Less intent, more visibility.
Shopping Campaigns
Product listings with price and image.
Ideal for ecommerce stores.
If you sell products, this is your storefront in search results.
Performance Max Campaigns
All-in-one campaigns across search, display, YouTube, Gmail, and more.
Works well for ecommerce and businesses with strong data and assets.
Think of it as full coverage with one engine.
YouTube Ads
Video-based campaigns on YouTube.
Great for storytelling, brand building, and remarketing.
Works best when you already have traffic or a known audience.
Recommended setup
- Service website → Start with Search + Remarketing
- Ecommerce → Start with Shopping or Performance Max
- New brand → Add Display or YouTube for reach
What my Google Ads service includes
Working with Daleen Prinsloo Digital & Design means you are not just getting ads. You are getting a system that is built, tested, and improved over time.
Setup and strategy
Account structure planning
Keyword research
Audience targeting setup
Conversion tracking configuration
Campaign creation
Writing and testing ad copy
Building campaigns aligned to your goals
Setting bids and budgets
Ongoing management
Weekly optimisation
Search term analysis
Bid adjustments
A/B testing of ads
Reporting and insights
Clear monthly reports
Cost per lead or sale tracking
Practical recommendations
Remarketing setup
Audience building from website visitors
Follow-up campaigns to re-engage users
Google Ads is not magic. It is math with a bit of human instinct. Give it budget, give it time, and it will show you where your customers are hiding. Then it is just a matter of showing up at the right moment with the right message. If you want traffic that means business, not just numbers, this is where the game begins.