TLDR;
- Stop obsessing over London demographics. On Google, a user's *search query* is their demographic. Focus on commercial intent, not postcodes.
- Treat your ad budget like an investment portfolio: 70% on proven, high-intent keywords, 20% on exploring mid-funnel queries, and 10% on experimental campaigns.
- The most important metric for ROI isn't Cost Per Lead, it's your Lifetime Value to Customer Acquisition Cost (LTV:CAC) ratio. Use our interactive calculator in this guide to figure yours out.
- In London's crowded market, a ruthless negative keyword strategy is your best defence against wasting money. You have to actively block irrelevant searches.
- Don't start with complex location bid adjustments. Win on keyword intent first, then refine by location if the data (not your assumptions) supports it.
Trying to slice and dice a Google Ads budget across London is a classic way to burn cash fast. Most people get bogged down in questions like "Should I spend more in Canary Wharf for finance leads?" or "How much should I allocate to target tech startups in Shoreditch?". This is, frankly, the wrong way to think about it, and it's probably why your ROI isn't what it should be. The truth is, on Google Search, a person's immediate need, the thing they type into the search bar, is a million times more important than their postcode or job title.
The real challenge in London isn't its diversity; it's the sheer, brutal level of competition. Every valuable keyword is a bidding war. To win, you can't afford to waste a single penny on clicks that won't convert. You need a strategy built on commercial intent, ruthless optimisation, and a crystal-clear understanding of what a customer is actually worth to you. Forget broad strokes and demographics for a minute. Let's get into how to actually structure your budget to get a return in one of the world's most expensive ad markets.
So, why is targeting by London borough a waste of time at first?
I see it all the time. A new client comes to us, proud of their campaign structure. They've got ad groups for Kensington & Chelsea, another for Camden, another for Hackney. They've adjusted bids based on where they *think* their wealthy customers live. It almost never works.
Why? Because Google Ads is an *intent-based* platform. You're not interrupting someone's social feed like on Meta. You are answering a direct question. When a Managing Director in a Richmond townhouse searches for "emergency commercial plumber," their intent is identical to an office manager in a Stratford high-rise searching for the exact same thing. Bidding more for the Richmond click based on a demographic assumption is just paying a premium for the same lead. You're bidding on the postcode, not the problem.
Your first job is to dominate the keywords that signal someone is ready to buy, regardless of where they are physically sitting when they search. The only exception is for businesses that are truly local, like a cafe or a retail store, where foot traffic is everything. For most service businesses and e-commerce stores, intent trumps location every single time. Many find they get traffic but it doesn't convert, and fixing this is usually about improving your keyword and ad alignment, not just tweaking location bids.
How should I structure my budget then?
Think of your budget less like a single pot of money and more like an investment portfolio. You need a mix of safe bets, calculated risks, and a small bit of experimental cash. This protects your core ROI while still giving you room to grow and find new opportunities. This is how we structure it for our clients.
-> Tier 1: The "Blue-Chip" Keywords (70% of Budget)
This is the bulk of your spend. It goes towards the absolute highest-intent, bottom-of-the-funnel keywords. These are the searches people make when their credit card is practically already out. They are not browsing; they are buying. Examples include:
- "b2b lead generation agency london"
- "same day MacBook repair"
- "buy handmade leather satchel uk"
- "divorce lawyer near me"
These keywords will be the most expensive, but they should also provide your most reliable returns. Your goal here isn't to get creative; it's to be relentlessly present. You should be aiming for a top impression share on these terms. This is your foundation.
-> Tier 2: The "Growth Stock" Keywords (20% of Budget)
This portion of your budget is for capturing people one step earlier in their journey. They know they have a problem, but they might not know the solution yet. They're doing their research. Examples could be:
- "how to improve sales team performance"
- "signs of a water leak in wall"
- "best software for small business accounting"
The Cost Per Lead here will be lower, but so will the immediate conversion rate. The goal with this 20% is to fill your pipeline and your retargeting lists. You capture their interest with helpful content or a free tool, then use remarketing to bring them back when they're ready to buy. It's a slightly longer game but crucial for scaling.
-> Tier 3: The "Venture Capital" Campaigns (10% of Budget)
This is your experimental fund. It's where you test new things with the full acceptance that some of it might fail. You could test a Performance Max campaign for a specific product, a Display campaign targeting visitors of specific industry news sites, or even dip your toe into YouTube ads. If you find a winner here, it can be a massive source of future growth. I remember one client in the environmental controls space where we tested LinkedIn alongside their existing ad campaigns; the test was so successful at a lower CPL that it became a core part of their "Blue-Chip" strategy, and we were able to reduce their overall cost per lead by 84%.
What's the one metric I need to track for real ROI?
Forget Cost Per Lead (CPL) or Cost Per Click (CPC). These are vanity metrics. A £5 lead that never converts is infinitely more expensive than a £250 lead that becomes a £10,000 customer. The only metric that truly matters for measuring ROI is the ratio between your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) and your Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC).
Lifetime Value (LTV): The total profit you expect to make from a single customer over the entire time they do business with you.
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC): The total amount you spend on sales and marketing to acquire one new customer.
A healthy business should aim for an LTV:CAC ratio of at least 3:1. This means for every £1 you spend to get a customer, you get £3 back in profit. If your ratio is 1:1, you're losing money once you account for overheads. If it's 5:1 or higher, you're likely under-investing in growth and leaving money on the table.
Calculating this isn't black magic. It's simple arithmetic. And once you know this number, you stop asking "Is this keyword too expensive?" and start asking "Can I afford *not* to bid on this keyword?". Knowing your numbers is fundamental to any founder's framework for achieving a positive ROI.
Use the calculator below to get a handle on your own LTV and what you can afford to pay for a customer.
How do I stop my budget evaporating on irrelevant clicks?
In a market as dense as London, your negative keyword list is just as important as your target keyword list. It's your shield. Every pound you prevent yourself from spending on a junk click is a pound you can invest in a click that matters. You need to be absolutly ruthless here.
This goes beyond obvious negatives like 'free' or 'jobs'. You need to think about your specific niche. For example:
- A high-end law firm specialising in corporate mergers must exclude terms like "pro bono," "free legal advice," "legal aid."
- An agency that builds bespoke Shopify sites for established brands needs to exclude "shopify tutorial," "free shopify theme," "how to start a dropshipping business."
- A commercial cleaning company bidding on "office cleaning london" must exclude "office cleaning jobs," "cleaner vacancies," "part time cleaning work."
Every search has an intent behind it, and you need to get good at spotting the ones that have zero chance of converting. Before launching any campaign, we spend a considerable amount of time building a foundational negative list. It's a non-negotiable step. If you're seeing a lot of clicks but no conversions, a leaky negative keyword list is often the culprit. We've put together a comprehensive negative keyword guide specifically for London businesses to help you plug these leaks.
Okay, so when *should* I use location bidding?
I'm not saying location data is useless. I'm saying it's a tool for *refinement*, not for initial strategy. After you've run your intent-focused campaigns for a solid 6-8 weeks, you'll have actual performance data. You can then go into your location reports and see if any real patterns have emerged.
You might find that, for whatever reason, leads from certain boroughs consistently convert at a higher rate, or have a higher average order value. In that case, it makes perfect sense to apply a positive bid adjustment (say, +15%) to those areas. Conversely, if an area is sending you lots of low-quality clicks, you can apply a negative bid adjustment or exclude it entirely.
The key difference is that this is a decision based on *your own performance data*, not on a vague demographic assumption. The only time you'd break this rule is if your business is intrinsically tied to a location. An electrician can't service a client 2 hours away, so using tight radius targeting around their base of operations from day one is just common sense.
(e.g., Plumbers, Retail Stores)
(e.g., SaaS, eCommerce, most B2B services)
So, what's the plan?
Maximising your Google Ads ROI in London isn't about complex demographic guesswork. It's about a disciplined, data-driven approach. It requires you to be an expert on your customer's problems, ruthless with your budget allocation, and obsessed with what a customer is truly worth to your business. Getting this right is the difference between Google Ads being your most profitable marketing channel and it being a black hole for your cash.
This is the main advice I have for you:
| Action Item | Why It's Important in London | First Step |
|---|---|---|
| Prioritise Commercial Intent | London's high CPCs mean you can't afford to pay for clicks from people who are just "browsing." You must target users actively looking to buy. | Brainstorm and research keywords that include transactional terms like "buy," "service," "quote," "near me," or specific product/model numbers. If you are not sure how to find the right keywords, check out our guide on how to stop wasting money on the wrong keywords. |
| Adopt the 70/20/10 Budget Portfolio | This structure balances reliable ROI from proven keywords with the need to explore new growth opportunities without risking your entire budget. | Create separate campaigns for your "Blue-Chip" (high-intent), "Growth" (mid-funnel), and "Venture" (experimental) keywords and allocate your budget accordingly. |
| Calculate Your LTV:CAC Ratio | This is the ultimate measure of profitability. It allows you to make intelligent bidding decisions based on a customer's true worth, not just a superficial CPL. | Use the interactive calculator in this guide. Gather your average monthly revenue per customer, gross margin, and churn rate to find your LTV. |
| Build a Killer Negative Keyword List | In such a competitive market, preventing wasted spend is as crucial as generating leads. Every irrelevant click you block frees up budget for a relevant one. | Start by adding obvious negatives like "free," "jobs," "tutorial," "DIY." Then, use the Search Terms report daily for the first few weeks to find and exclude irrelevant queries. |
This all takes time, expertise, and constant attention—things that are often in short supply when you're also trying to run a business. If you're serious about getting a real return from your ad spend in London and want to skip the expensive trial-and-error phase, it might be worth getting some expert help.
We offer a completely free, no-obligation strategy session where we can look at your current setup and give you actionable advice tailored to your specific business and goals. It's a chance to get a second pair of expert eyes on your campaigns and understand what's possible. Feel free to schedule a call if that sounds helpful.
Hope this helps!