Paid Ads
Google Ads for Small Businesses: A No-BS Guide
Budget examples, common mistakes, and realistic expectations for your first campaign.
Let me start with a number: India added over 120 million new internet users between 2021 and 2023. Your customers are online. The question isn't whether you need a digital presence - it's whether you're building it yourself or getting help from people who do this every day.
I talk to business owners all the time who are running their own Instagram, trying to figure out Google Ads, and wondering why their SEO hasn't moved in six months. Most of them are smart, hardworking people. But they're spending 15–20 hours a week on marketing tasks that a specialist could handle better in 5.
Digital marketing in India isn't just a scaled-down version of what works in the US. The market has its own rhythms. Tier-2 city buyers behave differently from metro consumers. UPI has changed how impulse purchases happen - a ₹499 product that used to require a credit card decision is now a three-tap buy. That changes your entire funnel design.
Smartphone penetration crossed 750 million users, and a huge chunk of those users are first-time internet buyers. They trust WhatsApp messages from brands. They respond to regional language content. They compare prices on Flipkart before buying directly from a brand's website. If your marketing strategy doesn't account for this, you're running someone else's playbook in your market. Think with Google's India insights has useful research on how Indian consumers actually behave online — worth reading for any business building a digital strategy here.
"The brands winning in India right now are not the ones with the biggest budgets. They're the ones who understand how their specific customer actually behaves online - and markets to them accordingly."
The "I'll do it myself" math usually looks like this: save ₹30,000/month on an agency, run campaigns yourself, profit. But let's look at what you're actually giving up.
Time is the obvious one. But there's also the cost of learning. Google Ads has a genuine learning curve. A beginner running their first campaign will typically waste 30–40% of their spend on wrong keywords, poor match types, and campaigns with no negative keyword lists. On a ₹15,000/month budget, that's ₹4,500–6,000 burned while you're figuring things out. Every month.
Then there's the opportunity cost. While you're spending evenings reading about broad match modifiers, you're not doing the thing that actually grows your business - talking to customers, improving your product, building your team.
Let's run the numbers honestly. This isn't a sales pitch - it's arithmetic.
If you want a proper in-house digital marketing function, you need at minimum:
That's ₹90,000–1,55,000/month in salaries alone. Add PF contributions, laptop, software subscriptions (SEMrush alone is ₹8,000–15,000/month), and you're at ₹1.2–1.8 lakh a month before you've spent a single rupee on actual ads.
A mid-tier agency retainer in India runs ₹25,000–60,000/month depending on scope. For that, you get a team - strategist, ads manager, content person, SEO analyst. The same five skills. No PF. No sick leave. No notice periods.
I'm not saying agencies are always better. A bad agency is worse than no agency. But the cost comparison is rarely as close as people assume.
There's a misconception that agencies are just running ads and posting on Instagram. Good ones do a lot more:
Five years ago, a Pune restaurant could fill seats with pamphlets and a newspaper ad. A Delhi clothing brand could run in local magazines. That world still exists but it's shrinking fast.
The brands that made the shift early - from physical retail to D2C, from newspaper to Meta ads, from word-of-mouth to SEO - are now 2–3 years ahead of the businesses that waited. And those 2–3 years matter enormously in a market that's moving this fast.
I've seen Jaipur handicraft sellers doing ₹2 crore a year through Instagram and a clean website. I've seen Mumbai fitness studios fill memberships entirely through Google Ads at ₹500/day. The common thread isn't budget - it's the decision to take digital seriously before their competitors did.
It's not about intelligence. Business owners who run their own marketing usually fail for one of these reasons:
Most small business marketing fails not because of the budget - it fails because nobody is watching it closely enough.
This is where most advice falls apart. Every agency will show you their best case studies. Here's what to actually look for:
Ask for client references in your industry. A D2C fashion brand and a B2B SaaS company need completely different approaches. If an agency can't point to work in your space, that's a risk you're taking.
Ask how they handle reporting. Good agencies can tell you exactly what they'll track and why. If the answer is "we'll send you a monthly report," ask what's in it. If they can't be specific, move on.
Understand who actually works on your account. The person who presents the pitch is rarely the person who'll manage your campaigns day-to-day. Ask to meet the actual team.
Be suspicious of guarantees. No honest agency guarantees specific ROAS or traffic numbers - there are too many variables outside their control. They should be able to give you realistic benchmarks based on your industry and budget, not promises.
Start with a defined scope. Don't sign a 12-month retainer with a new agency. Start with a 3-month engagement with clear deliverables. If they're good, you'll know by month two.
This is worth setting expectations on. Digital marketing results - especially SEO - take time. Any agency telling you otherwise is lying.
Paid ads can show results within 2–4 weeks, but the first 30 days are usually the learning phase - the algorithm is figuring out who to show your ads to. Don't judge performance too early.
SEO takes 3–6 months minimum before you see meaningful organic traffic movement. Content marketing takes longer. If you're expecting quick wins from organic channels, you'll be disappointed - and that's not the agency's fault.
What should happen in the first 90 days: proper tracking setup, a clear content and campaign calendar, baseline metrics established, and early signals from paid campaigns about what messaging resonates with your audience.
Digital marketing in India is not optional anymore. Your customers are online, your competitors are there, and the gap between brands with a solid digital presence and those without is widening every quarter.
Whether you hire an agency or build in-house depends on your budget and stage. But doing it halfway - posting occasionally, running campaigns without tracking, ignoring SEO - is the worst possible outcome. It costs money without delivering results.
If you're serious about digital, treat it seriously. Get the right people on it. Check their work. And don't sign anything longer than 3 months until you trust them.
We work with Indian businesses at different stages - from first website to full-funnel campaigns. We have specific experience across industries like education, healthcare, e-commerce, and real estate. If you want to understand what a proper digital engagement looks like for your specific situation, have a conversation with us. No pitch deck, no hour-long presentation.
Just an honest conversation about what you need.
Paid Ads
Budget examples, common mistakes, and realistic expectations for your first campaign.
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The "I have Instagram" objection - addressed directly and honestly.
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