B2B Google Ads
Bidding Strategy:
tCPA vs tROAS
vs Manual
Smart bidding works brilliantly — until it doesn’t. This is the tactical guide for B2B marketers whose campaigns have stalled, whose CPL crept up after a bid strategy switch, or who aren’t sure which strategy to use in the first place. Exact thresholds, transition rules, and a decision framework you can use this week.
Why Bid Strategy
Choice Matters
Bid strategy is the instruction you give Google on how to spend your budget. Get it right and the algorithm does the heavy lifting — finding the highest-intent searches at the lowest viable cost. Get it wrong and the algorithm optimises confidently toward the wrong goal, often for weeks before you notice.
In B2B, the stakes are higher than in ecommerce. Your CPCs are €15–80. Your conversion volume is lower. Your sales cycle is long. All of that means the algorithm has less data to work with, less tolerance for error, and more ways to quietly waste budget while still showing green conversion numbers in the dashboard.
The Core Principle
Smart bidding is only as good as the data you feed it. Conversion volume, conversion accuracy, and conversion value are the three inputs. If any one of them is wrong or thin, the strategy built on top of them will underperform — regardless of which one you choose.
The guide below treats each strategy as a tool with specific use cases, thresholds, and failure modes. The goal isn’t to find the “best” strategy in the abstract — it’s to find the right strategy for your account’s current state.
Manual CPC
Manual CPC puts you in direct control of how much you bid on each keyword. You set the max CPC; Google charges up to that amount. No algorithm, no learning period, no minimum conversion volume required.
In B2B, Manual CPC is the correct default for any campaign that is new, recently restructured, or running below 20 conversions per month. The smart bidding algorithms require data to function — running tCPA on a campaign with 8 conversions a month is like asking someone to learn a pattern from six data points. The result is usually severe impression share restriction or erratic bidding that produces unpredictable CPL swings.
When Manual CPC is the right choice:
- New campaigns with zero conversion history
- Post-restructure: new ad groups, new campaigns, new keywords that have no data yet
- Campaigns with fewer than 20 conversions per month
- When you need maximum impression share and want to prioritise data gathering over CPL efficiency
- Brand campaigns — CPCs are already low, competition is minimal, smart bidding adds no value
Common mistake: leaving Manual CPC in place after the account has accumulated enough conversion volume for smart bidding to work. Once you hit 30+ conversions per campaign per month, Manual CPC typically underperforms Maximise Conversions — because the algorithm can find better auctions than manual bid logic can predict.
Maximise Conversions
Maximise Conversions tells Google to get as many conversions as possible within your daily budget — without a CPL target. It’s smart bidding, but unconstrained. The algorithm spends your entire budget optimising for conversion volume, not efficiency.
In the B2B bid strategy progression, Maximise Conversions is the bridge: you switch here from Manual CPC once you have 30 conversions per campaign per month, and you stay here until you have enough data to set a meaningful tCPA target.
When Maximise Conversions is the right choice:
- 30–50 conversions per campaign per month — enough for the algorithm to work, not enough for a reliable tCPA
- When you want to let the algorithm learn without a target constraining it prematurely
- When you’re entering a new market or testing new keywords and need volume data quickly
- After a major restructure — use it for 3–4 weeks to re-seed conversion data before switching to tCPA
The risk in B2B: without a tCPA cap, Maximise Conversions can spend your entire budget in the first few hours of the day at high CPCs, leaving no budget for later in the day when B2B decision-makers are typically more active. Monitor hourly spend distribution and set a sensible daily budget ceiling.
Target CPA
Target CPA is the workhorse bid strategy for mature B2B accounts. You tell Google your target cost-per-acquisition; it adjusts bids in every auction to get conversions at or near that target. Unlike Maximise Conversions, it’s designed for efficiency rather than volume.
When it works well — which requires the data thresholds below — tCPA can sustainably reduce CPL while maintaining or growing conversion volume. It compounds: lower CPL means the same budget buys more leads, which means more data for the algorithm, which means it improves further.
Requirements for tCPA to work in B2B:
- Minimum 50 conversions per campaign per month (Google’s official minimum is 30 — in B2B, treat 50 as the real threshold)
- Conversion tracking must be counting the right event — see the CPL audit guide for what to check
- Your target must be set at least 20–30% above your current average CPL on switchover day — setting it at your ideal CPL immediately is the most common mistake
- Budget of at least 10× your target CPA as a daily budget (e.g., if tCPA = €200, daily budget ≥ €2,000) — otherwise the algorithm can’t generate enough auctions to optimise
Target-Setting Rule
If your current CPL is €300 and you want it at €200, set your initial tCPA at €380 (≈ +25% above current). Run it for 3 weeks. If CPL stabilises, lower the target to €340. Then €300. Then €260. Never drop more than 15–20% at a time, and wait 2–3 weeks between adjustments.
If you want an expert to diagnose why your tCPA campaigns aren’t hitting target rather than working through this alone, here’s how I work with B2B companies — I do this kind of bid strategy audit as part of every account review.
Target ROAS
Target ROAS tells Google to optimise for conversion value, not conversion volume. Instead of a cost target, you set a revenue return target: e.g., 400% tROAS means you want €4 back for every €1 spent. The algorithm bids more aggressively when it predicts a high-value conversion and less when it predicts a low-value one.
In ecommerce, tROAS is the natural evolution of tCPA — because every purchase has a revenue value attached. In B2B, the picture is murkier, and tROAS underperforms in most accounts I audit.
Why tROAS struggles in B2B:
- No real-time revenue data: most B2B companies don’t pass deal value back to Google Ads at conversion time. Without this, tROAS assigns an arbitrary or equal value to every lead — which makes it identical to tCPA but with an extra layer of complexity.
- Long sales cycles: tROAS needs to know the outcome of each conversion quickly to adjust bids. If your average sales cycle is 60–90 days, Google is bidding on signals it won’t receive for months.
- Low conversion volume: tROAS requires even more conversion data than tCPA. Google recommends 50 conversions per month; in practice, for tROAS to work well in B2B you need 100+.
When tROAS does work in B2B: if you have offline conversion import set up — passing closed-won deal values from your CRM back to Google Ads via the Offline Conversions API — then tROAS becomes genuinely powerful. It allows the algorithm to distinguish between a €5,000 deal and a €50,000 deal and bid accordingly. This is advanced infrastructure, but it’s the right long-term direction for any B2B account spending €20k+/month.
Decision Framework
Use this table to identify the right strategy for your account’s current state. The primary variable is monthly conversion volume — everything else is secondary.
| Conversions / Campaign / Month | Recommended Strategy | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0 – 20 | Manual CPC | No data for smart bidding. Prioritise impression share and data collection. |
| 20 – 50 | Maximise Conversions | Algorithm can work but tCPA target not yet reliable. Run without target. |
| 50 – 100 | Target CPA | Set target at +25% above current CPL. Tighten by 15% every 3 weeks. |
| 100+ with revenue data | Target ROAS | Only with offline conversion import from CRM. Otherwise stay on tCPA. |
| Brand campaigns (any volume) | Manual CPC | Brand CPCs are low and stable. Smart bidding adds no value here. |
| New market / new structure | Manual CPC | Rebuild data from zero. Switch after 30 conversions in new structure. |
Transition Rules
Switching bid strategies is high-risk if done without a plan. Each switch resets the learning period and temporarily destabilises performance. These are the rules I follow for every account transition.
Golden Rule
One change at a time. Never switch bid strategy at the same time as making structural changes (new ad groups, pausing keywords, changing budgets significantly). If multiple things change simultaneously, you can’t attribute performance movements to any one cause.
Troubleshooting
These are the eight most common bid strategy failure patterns I find in B2B accounts — and the specific fix for each.
FAQ
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Not Sure Which
Strategy to Use?
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