What a Weekly Google Ads Report Should Tell a Home-Service Owner
A weekly Google Ads report should tell you four things in plain English: how many calls you got and what each cost, what’s working, what needs your decision, and what your agency actually did. If your current report doesn’t answer those in two minutes, it’s hiding something.
1. The bottom line, first
Ours opens like this: “Ten calls this week at about $26 each, up from six last week and right back to the best pace of the month. Spend stayed essentially flat, so this is more calls for the same money.” One paragraph. No login required, no dashboard safari.
2. Rank loss versus budget loss
When you miss auctions, Google records why: your ad quality was too low, or your budget cap was hit. Those need opposite fixes. Quality problems are fixed with better ads and tighter keyword-to-ad relevance — free. Budget problems are fixed with money. An agency that can’t tell you which one is your constraint is guessing with your wallet. In one client account we cut rank-based losses from 66% to 44% in a month of quality work — before recommending a single extra dollar of budget.
3. The waste ledger
Every week we list the junk searches we blocked: TV repairs hitting an appliance campaign, carpet shampooers, people hunting a manufacturer’s warranty line. Small dollars weekly, big dollars yearly. If nobody is running negative-keyword rounds on your account, you are sponsoring strangers’ confusion.
4. The question back to you
The report should end with a CRM check: were those ten calls real jobs that booked? Ad platforms count conversions; only your schedule counts revenue. Closing that loop weekly is what lets the account learn what a good call looks like.
Want to see your account through this lens? The free audit includes an ads waste check.
Home services marketing that makes your phone ring. Founded by Ethan Van De Hey, with Dennis Yu as Chief Technology Officer. Part of the Local Service Spotlight network.
Greater Milwaukee, Wisconsin · (920) 850-7156


