Tag: platform-google

  • How to Read the Google Ads Auction in 2026 (and Pull ROAS Up by 30%)

    Most Google Ads accounts we audit in Bangalore have the same problem. The campaigns are technically live. The conversions look fine on the surface. But the auction itself — the place where your money is actually changing hands — nobody’s reading it.

    That’s the gap. And it’s where 20–30% of ROAS quietly hides every month.

    This piece is the working version of how our performance team reads the Google Ads auction in 2026. No theory, no Skillshare diagrams. Just the moves that consistently move the needle for D2C, real estate, and B2B clients we run from our HSR Layout studio.

    1. The auction has a fingerprint. Learn to spot it.

    Every Google Ads campaign leaves a fingerprint in its bid landscape report. If you don’t know what a healthy fingerprint looks like, you can’t tell when one’s broken.

    Here are the four signatures we check first, in this order:

    • Search top IS > 60% on your highest-intent terms. If it’s not, you’re being out-bid on the queries that pay you.
    • Lost IS (rank) below 25%. Above that, your Quality Score or bid is bleeding.
    • Auction insights — overlap rate trending. A new competitor moving from 3% to 15% overlap in 30 days is a real signal, not noise.
    • CPC volatility < 18% week-on-week. Wild CPC swings usually mean an automated bid strategy that’s still in learning, not an auction problem.

    Print these four numbers on a sticky note. Look at them every Monday. That’s it — that’s the entire diagnostic.

    2. Query mining is a daily habit, not a quarterly task

    The single most under-rated routine in any account: a 10-minute search-terms scan, every working day.

    Most agencies do this once a month. By then the damage is done — three weeks of budget burned on “free download” or “salary jobs” or, in the Bangalore market, queries with “PG” or “rent” attached.

    We run it like this:

    1. Filter search terms to last 7 days.
    2. Sort by cost descending.
    3. Look only at the top 20 rows.
    4. Add anything irrelevant as a negative keyword. Same day.

    That’s the whole ritual. Ten minutes. Done before your first chai. The compounding effect over a quarter is real — we’ve seen accounts shave 12–18% off wasted spend without touching a single bid.

    3. Performance Max isn’t a black box. You’re just not feeding it.

    This is the most common mistake we see in Indian e-commerce accounts. Brands turn on PMax, leave the asset library half-built, set a max-conversion-value bid, and wonder why ROAS plateaus at 2.8×.

    PMax is a hungry algorithm. It needs feeding. Specifically:

    Asset slot Minimum count What “good” looks like
    Headlines 15 Mix of brand, benefit, urgency, location
    Long headlines 5 All five used, distinct angles
    Descriptions 5 Each one a complete proposition
    Square images 10+ Mix of product, lifestyle, UGC, in-context
    Landscape images 10+ Same mix, different crops
    Videos 3+ 15-sec, 30-sec, 60-sec — different hooks

    Most accounts hit “minimum required” and stop. The accounts that pull away from the pack hit asset richness — usually 25+ headlines and 15+ images per asset group. The algorithm rewards optionality.

    4. The bid strategy isn’t your enemy. The conversion signal is.

    You’ll read a hundred LinkedIn posts saying “tCPA is broken” or “Maximise conversions wastes budget.” It’s almost never the bid strategy. It’s the signal feeding it.

    Three diagnostic questions, in order:

    • Are the conversions being attributed to the right action? A “lead form fill” that includes a thank-you-page bounce is not a lead.
    • Are conversion values accurate? If a Bangalore real estate brand sends ₹0 as the value because the form sits before pricing, the bid strategy has nothing to optimise toward.
    • Is enhanced conversions on? In 2026, if you’re running without enhanced conversions on a logged-in or first-party-data heavy site, you’re leaving 8–12% match accuracy on the table.

    Fix the signal first. Then judge the strategy.

    5. The 30% comes from compounding, not heroes

    People want the “one weird trick” version of paid media. The truth is duller and more useful: the 20–30% ROAS lift we routinely deliver for clients is the sum of many small, boring habits.

    Here’s the weekly checklist our team runs:

    • Monday — auction fingerprint review (5 min)
    • Tuesday-Friday — daily query mining (10 min/day)
    • Wednesday — asset group health check (one creative refresh)
    • Thursday — bid strategy audit (any campaign in learning > 14 days?)
    • Friday — competitor auction insights scan (5 min)

    It’s not glamorous. It’s not what most agency decks promise. But across 30+ Indian brands we’ve run paid media for, this is the difference between “campaigns are running” and “the budget is compounding.”

    What to do this week

    Open one campaign — your highest-spend one. Pull the auction insights. Pull the search-terms report. Spend 20 minutes reading them like a book, not a spreadsheet.

    You’ll find at least one move worth making before lunch. Then you start the habit.

    If you’d rather we ran the diagnosis on your account in real time, our team in HSR Layout does free 30-minute audit calls — book one here.


    About Webfluence — we’re a performance marketing studio in Bangalore running paid, SEO and creative for 30+ Indian brands. If you’re trying to grow a business in India and the channel mix isn’t paying off, come talk to us — first call is free, no slides.

    Want more from this desk? Subscribe to The Brief — we send one long-form essay a fortnight, no fluff.

  • How to Rank for ‘Digital Marketing Agency Bangalore’ in 2026 — A Real Operator Playbook

    If you’ve tried to rank for digital marketing agency Bangalore any time in the last two years, you already know the search results are brutal. Twelve aggregator pages. Three legacy WP sites with thousand-word “services” pages from 2019. And then everyone else fighting for a single Map Pack slot.

    We run a performance marketing studio out of HSR Layout. We’ve been ranking for that exact term — and a cluster around it — for the last few quarters. This post is what actually moved the needle, written in the order we did it.

    No theory. If something didn’t work, it’s not in the post.

    The honest starting point: this isn’t a “one big page” keyword

    If you’re hoping to write one banger of a service page and rank, that strategy died around the time AI Overviews launched in India. Digital marketing agency Bangalore is now what Google calls a topical query — it’s resolved by a cluster of pages that collectively prove you do this work in this city.

    The five pillars our cluster looks like:

    • A primary service hub — your homepage, optimised for the head term but not stuffed.
    • A case-studies index — proof you actually run campaigns, not blog about them.
    • A local-intent supporting page — neighbourhood and industry combinations.
    • A thought-leadership feed — your version of The Brief.
    • A locations or about page with verifiable, specific NAP signal.

    Miss any one of these and you’ll plateau at page two.

    Step 1 — Fix the local signal nobody’s bothered to fix

    Before anything content-side, check your Google Business Profile. Most Bangalore agencies treat it like an afterthought. Three quick wins almost everyone is sitting on:

    1. Primary category set to “Marketing agency” — not “Advertising agency” or “Internet marketing service.” Marketing agency outranks both for the head term.
    2. Service list populated with at least 12 services, each with a unique 200-character description. Don’t reuse boilerplate.
    3. Q&A seeded with the 6–8 questions clients actually ask in discovery calls. Pre-empt the questions and Google will surface them.

    This alone — done properly, with photos refreshed monthly — moves most agencies up 3–5 spots in the Map Pack within 60 days. We’ve watched it happen across 14 location-based clients.

    Step 2 — Topical authority, but actually topical

    “Topical authority” became a buzzword in 2024. By 2026 it’s table stakes. The question is whether your site looks topically dense to a crawler — or just looks like a content farm.

    Three tests to run on your own site:

    Test Pass mark How to check
    Cluster depth 10+ pages on a sub-topic Group by URL pattern, not category
    Internal linking density 3+ contextual links per article Screaming Frog → InLinks count
    Anchor diversity No single anchor > 30% Ahrefs → internal anchors

    If you fail any of these — and most agency sites we audit fail at least two — you have a topical-authority problem before you have a content problem.

    Step 3 — Schema markup, but the parts that matter

    Schema is one of those things every SEO blog hypes and almost no one implements. For a local agency, three schemas pull weight:

    • LocalBusiness — full NAP, opening hours, geo coordinates, sameAs to social profiles. Non-negotiable.
    • Service — one Service entity per offering. List on a /services hub page.
    • Article — for every blog post, with author Person schema linked back to a real /about-the-author page.

    Test it with Google’s Rich Results tool. If it doesn’t pass, fix it before you ship a single piece of content.

    Step 4 — The internal linking work nobody talks about

    Here’s the unglamorous truth: a lot of “we improved SEO” stories are actually “we audited internal linking and unblocked the equity flow.” Specifically:

    • Service pages should be linked from at least 20 other pages on your site. Most agencies link to them only from the nav.
    • Pillar posts (like this one) should link to 4–6 cluster posts, and those cluster posts should link back to the pillar.
    • Anchor text should be specific, varied, and natural — not “click here,” not “read more.”

    For our own site, we ran an audit, found 38 broken or orphaned internal links, and fixed them in a weekend. Rankings on the head term moved from page 3 to page 1 in roughly six weeks. That single afternoon of work outperformed two months of new content.

    Step 5 — Content, but the kind that earns links

    Once the technical and structural work is done, content does its job. The shape of content that ranks for service-cluster queries in 2026:

    • Specific to a sub-vertical — “Performance marketing for Bangalore real estate” beats “Performance marketing services” every time.
    • Has a strong opinion — Google’s quality algorithm rewards posts that actually say something. Hedged generalities don’t rank.
    • Includes original data or examples — even small ones. Numbers from one campaign you ran beat aggregated industry stats.
    • Updated quarterly — old posts re-published with refreshed data outperform new posts most of the time.

    This is the part most agencies skip — and it’s why most agency blogs read like rephrased Wikipedia.

    What to do this month if you want to start ranking

    1. Pick one head term you actually want to win.
    2. Map the existing top 10 — what shape of pages are ranking? Service pages? Listicles? Long-form?
    3. Fix your GBP. Yes, this week.
    4. Audit internal linking — 90% of you will find quick wins.
    5. Plan a 5-post cluster around the head term and ship it inside 30 days.

    That’s the playbook. It’s not fast — Google’s local stack rewards patience over hacks — but it’s the only one we’ve watched work consistently for our own studio and for the 30+ Bangalore brands we run growth for.

    If you want a no-slide audit of where your site stands today, our team runs free 30-minute SEO walk-throughs from our HSR Layout office. We won’t pitch you on the call. Promise.


    About Webfluence — we’re a performance marketing studio in Bangalore running paid, SEO and creative for 30+ Indian brands. If you’re trying to grow a business in India and the channel mix isn’t paying off, come talk to us — first call is free, no slides.

    Want more from this desk? Subscribe to The Brief — we send one long-form essay a fortnight, no fluff.