A professional Google Ads audit typically covers six areas: account access and data gathering, conversion tracking verification, campaign structure analysis, keyword and targeting review, competitive benchmarking, and the deliverable report.

Phase 1: Account Access and Data Gathering

The audit starts with the auditor getting read-only access to your Google Ads account. They'll usually also want access to Google Analytics (GA4) and sometimes your CRM or backend conversion data. The reason is simple: Google Ads numbers alone don't tell the full story.

A good auditor will look at 90 days of data minimum, often 6-12 months. They're looking for trends and patterns, not just a snapshot. An account that had a great March but a terrible February tells a different story than one that's been stable all quarter.

They'll also ask you questions about your business: what your target CPA or ROAS is, what your margins look like, what your sales cycle is, and what your growth goals are. These aren't just pleasantries. Without understanding your business context, the auditor can't tell you whether a $40 CPA is good or bad.

Phase 2: Conversion Tracking Verification

This is always the first technical check, and for good reason. If your conversion data is wrong, every other metric in the account is misleading. The auditor will verify:

We mentioned in our red flags article that about 40% of accounts have tracking issues. Professional auditors will catch things that automated tools miss, like a tag that fires on the thank-you page but also fires on a related page that isn't actually a conversion.

Conversion tracking verification process in a professional audit
Professional auditors verify tracking against multiple data sources to catch misconfigurations that automated tools miss.

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Phase 3: Campaign Structure Analysis

The auditor maps out your entire account structure: which campaigns exist, how they're organized, how budget flows between them, and where there's overlap or gaps.

They're looking for structural inefficiencies:

This phase goes beyond what free audit tools can do, because structure analysis requires understanding how campaigns interact with each other, not just whether individual settings are correct.

Phase 4: Keyword, Audience, and Targeting Review

This is usually the deepest part of the audit. The auditor reviews:

Search Terms

They'll pull the full search terms report and analyze what you're actually paying for. Irrelevant queries, high-spend/zero-conversion terms, and missing negative keywords all get flagged. They'll often quantify the waste: "You spent $3,400 last month on search terms that generated zero conversions."

Keyword Performance

Which keywords are driving results and which are just spending budget? A professional audit doesn't just flag low performers. It identifies why they're underperforming (bad Quality Score, wrong match type, landing page mismatch) and what to do about each one.

Audience Strategy

What audiences are you reaching, and which ones are missing? The auditor checks remarketing lists, customer match uploads, in-market and affinity audiences, and exclusions. Many accounts have no audience strategy at all, which means the algorithm has no signals about who your best customers are.

Phase 5: Competitive Benchmarking

A professional audit includes competitive context that you can't get from looking at your own account in isolation. Using Google's Auction Insights, third-party tools, and industry benchmarks, the auditor can tell you:

This context matters because "high CPCs" mean different things in different markets. A $12 CPC might be expensive for one industry and a bargain in another.

Phase 6: The Report and Recommendations

The deliverable is typically a report that covers all findings organized by priority. A good audit report includes:

  1. Executive summary: Top 3-5 issues and estimated impact
  2. Detailed findings: Each issue with evidence, screenshots, and data
  3. Prioritized recommendations: What to fix first, second, third
  4. Estimated impact: What fixing each issue could save or improve
  5. Implementation notes: Specific enough that someone can execute the fixes

The difference between a good audit report and a mediocre one is specificity. "Improve your Quality Scores" is useless. "These 12 keywords have Quality Scores below 5. Here's why each one is low and what to change" is actionable.

What a DIY Audit Can't Cover

If you've done a 30-minute self-audit, you've caught the obvious stuff. A professional audit goes further in three ways:

If you want to start with an automated check before deciding whether a full audit is worth it, our free audit runs 54 checks and gives you a scored breakdown. It's a good way to see whether your account has enough issues to warrant deeper analysis.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most professional audits take 3-7 business days depending on account complexity. An account with 5 campaigns is faster to audit than one with 50. The auditor needs time to analyze patterns across different date ranges, not just take a snapshot.

Yes, typically read-only access via Google Ads' built-in sharing. This lets them see all the data without being able to change anything. A reputable auditor will never ask for admin access just to review an account.

No. A properly conducted audit is observation only. Nobody changes any settings, pauses any campaigns, or adjusts any bids during the audit phase. Changes only happen after you review the findings and approve specific recommendations.

Professional audits typically range from $500 to $3,000 depending on account size and depth. Some agencies offer free audits as a sales tool, which can still be valuable, but paid audits tend to be more thorough and less biased toward recommending the auditor's own services.

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