You’d think that if you’re paying for Google Ads, the system would be working for you. But here’s the truth: Google Ads is designed to make money for you and Google, and you don’t always come first.
“If you’re not keeping a close eye on your settings, what feels like a smart investment can quietly become a black hole of wasted clicks and missed intent,” says Seth Price of blusharkdigital.com.
This article walks you through three overlooked settings that can silently eat your budget.
Setting #1: Auto-Applied Suggestions
You might not realize it, but every couple of weeks, Google Ads may quietly make changes to your campaigns without asking. This feature is called Auto-Applied Recommendations, and unless you’ve gone in and turned them off, it’s on by default. The platform reviews your campaigns and makes “improvements” behind the scenes, adjusting things like keywords, ads, and targeting criteria, all in the name of optimization. Sounds helpful in theory, but for local business owners who depend on precision targeting, these behind-the-curtain tweaks can be more harmful than helpful.
Here’s the issue: Google’s AI is smart, but it’s not personal. It does not know that your ideal leads come from certain ZIP codes or that some inquiries are worth ten times more than others. It doesn’t know that a call from someone looking for a $99 service isn’t nearly as valuable as a business client who brings $9,000 in recurring revenue. When these auto-suggestions kick in, especially if they broaden your keyword scope, you might see more clicks and conversions, but not the ones that move the needle. That’s how budgets get drained quietly.
To check if you’re affected, head into your Google Ads dashboard and look for “Auto-Apply Recommendations” under the “Recommendations” tab. There you’ll find a list of changes Google is allowed to make on your behalf. You can toggle each category on or off, and you should. At the very least, disable the ones related to keyword changes and ad text until you can review them yourself. These aren’t minor edits. They can reshape the entire tone and targeting of your campaign.
Check Your Location Targeting: “Presence” vs “Presence or Interest”
There’s a brief setting buried in your Google Ads account that sounds pretty smart at first: show your ads to people who are in your target location or who’ve shown interest in it. Seems reasonable, right? After all, someone Googling “Seattle roofing companies” probably wants a roofer. But what if they’re just researching average roofing prices for a school project in Ohio? Or reading a blog post about Seattle’s architecture from a cafe in London? Google sees those folks as “interested,” and, unless you tell it otherwise, it will happily show them your ads (and charge you for their clicks).
That’s fine if you’re in tourism or real estate: industries where potential customers often search from elsewhere. But if you’re a Tacoma-based family lawyer or a Bellevue appliance repair company, those out-of-state clicks won’t do anything for your bottom line. Imagine someone in Ontario searching “Tacoma divorce court” for a law school assignment. They see your ad, click through out of curiosity, and you’re down $6 or $8 with nothing to show for it. Multiply that by dozens of irrelevant clicks per month, and suddenly your local campaign isn’t so local anymore.
Here’s what to do: go into your campaign’s Advanced Location Settings and change the option from “Presence or interest” to just “Presence.” That one small shift tells Google to show your ads only to people who are physically located in your service area, not tourists, not out-of-town researchers, and not accidental clicks from someone curious about your city. If you serve a local audience, your ads should reach a local audience. Anything else is wasted budget.
Rethink How You Use Broad Match Keywords
If you’ve been using Google Ads for more than a minute, you probably learned early on to stay far away from broad match. Maybe you dropped in something like “Seattle contractor” and ended up paying for traffic on “DIY fence kits” or “contractor drama TV shows.” For years, broad match felt like handing your wallet to a hyperactive toddler with a shopping list. But things have changed. Google’s algorithms now use machine learning tools like BERT to figure out why someone is searching, not just what words they typed.
This doesn’t mean broad match is flawless now. It means that, when used carefully, it can help uncover search terms that never would have occurred to you but are still a perfect fit for your offer. Maybe you’ve been targeting “business IT support” in Spokane, but people are finding you with “remote fix my work computer.” That’s valuable insight. Of course, the tradeoff is that broad match still brings some noise. You’ll see clicks for half-relevant phrases or off-topic searches, and if you’re not checking your search terms regularly, that waste adds up fast.
Here’s how to try it without burning cash: don’t replace your entire keyword list. Just layer in a few broad match terms, maybe 20 to 30% of your total, and watch how they perform. Every few days, scan the search terms and start building out your negative keywords list. Keep what’s working. Cut what isn’t.
Final Words
There will always be some trial and error in digital advertising, but knowing where to search can often mean the difference between floundering and pushing forward. These three options are easily overlooked but powerful to handle. Now that you know what to tweak, you’re in a stronger position to run campaigns that serve your business, not just Google’s bottom line. Wishing you sharper insights and stronger returns ahead.
















