Skip to main content

What to expect from your first 3 months of Google ads

Timeline of Google ads from the creation, learning phase and ongoing optimization.

Dieselmatic Team avatar
Written by Dieselmatic Team
Updated over a month ago

Step 1: Onboarding & Account Creation

During onboarding, our marketing experts create a dedicated Google Ads account for your business. We also build a custom Paid Media Plan based on your services, target customers, and budget.

This setup ensures your campaigns are designed to support your specific business goals from day one.

Step 2: Approving Your Ad Plan

Before anything goes live, we’ll present your monthly ad budget and campaign strategy for your approval. Once you sign off, we’ll build your campaigns and have them ready to launch alongside your new website.

Step 3: Campaign Launch (Website Go-Live)

After your website goes live, your Google Ads will officially start running.

Your ads will showcase your services to potential customers in targeted locations — whether it’s local truck stops, surrounding cities, or regions tied to your growth strategy.

Step 4: Collecting Feedback (Months 2–3)

As the campaigns run and data comes in, your feedback becomes extremely valuable.

We encourage you to share what types of leads you’re getting, which service areas matter most, and any patterns you notice. Your insights help us fine-tune your campaigns even faster.

Step 5: Campaign Optimization (Months 2–3)

Once we gather enough performance data, our team moves into optimization mode.

We analyze clicks, conversions, user behavior, and costs — then adjust targeting, ad copy, and bids to maximize your results and ROI based on real-world performance.

A Partnership That Evolves

Launching your ads is just the beginning. We continue tracking progress, improving your campaigns, and communicating with you every step of the way.

Whether it’s responding to feedback, refining targeting, or adjusting strategy for seasonal needs, your Google Ads journey is a dynamic process focused on long-term growth.

Did this answer your question?