Smart Bidding Strategy Selector
Picking a bid strategy is the highest-leverage setting in a Google Ads campaign — and the one most accounts get wrong by reaching for a target before they have the signal to hold one. Tell the tool your goal and your conversion volume; it returns the strategy that fits and the moment to graduate to the next.
Match the bid strategy to your goal and your signal. Goal sets the family: conversions → the Conversions family, revenue → the Conversion-Value family, visits → Maximize Clicks, reach → Target Impression Share. Signal sets the version: with under ~15 conversions in 30 days, run the un-targeted ‘Maximize’ version to build data; at roughly 15-30+ conversions in 30 days, layer a Target CPA or Target ROAS set near your recent achieved number, then tighten slowly.
Smart Bidding Strategy Selector inputs and result
How to use this calculator
- Pick the goal the campaign actually servesBe honest: a campaign built to drive demo requests has a conversions goal, not a traffic goal. The goal you choose determines the entire strategy family the tool recommends.
- Enter trailing 30-day conversionsUse the conversion count for this campaign or a tightly related group over the last 30 days. This is the single biggest input — it decides whether you are ready for a target-based strategy.
- Be truthful about targetsOnly select ‘yes’ for a CPA or ROAS target if you have a number tied to margin that you would actually defend in a budget meeting. A made-up target produces a made-up strategy.
- Set account maturityNew accounts need a protected learning phase; mature accounts can run portfolio strategies. This tunes the switch-when guidance.
- Read the recommendation and the switch triggerThe tool names the strategy and the exact condition for graduating to the next one. Re-run it monthly as your conversion volume grows.
RGM Expert Says
The mistake we unwind most often is a Target CPA campaign running on eight conversions a month. The advertiser set an ambitious target, the algorithm could not find enough qualifying auctions to hold it, and volume collapsed — which looked like the strategy failing when really it was starved of signal. The fix is almost always to drop back to Maximize Conversions, let it build data for a few weeks, then re-introduce a target anchored to the achieved CPA.
We treat bid strategy as a staircase, not a switch. Maximize Clicks proves the campaign can buy relevant traffic; Maximize Conversions proves it can buy conversions and reveals your true CPA; only then does Target CPA earn its place. Skipping steps is how accounts end up thrashing through repeated learning phases, each one resetting the clock.
The other discipline is patience with targets. Every meaningful change — budget, target, conversion settings — can trigger a fresh learning phase, so we move one lever at a time and adjust targets in 10-20% steps. The clients who let smart bidding settle outperform the ones who tune it daily, almost without exception.
How it works
The tool encodes a simple decision tree used across well-run paid accounts: goal selects the strategy family, then conversion volume and target availability select the specific strategy. The thresholds reflect Google’s own guidance that automated targets need enough recent conversions to optimize against.
- Goal — what the campaign is for; sets the strategy family.
- Conversions / 30d — trailing signal; below ~15-30 favors un-targeted Maximize strategies.
- CPA / ROAS target — a defensible number unlocks the target-based version.
- Maturity — governs learning-phase caution and portfolio bidding.
Conversion-volume thresholds are RGM rules of thumb informed by Google Ads Help: about Smart Bidding. Always anchor a new target to recent achieved performance, not an aspiration.
Why bid strategy is the setting that makes or breaks a campaign
Automated bidding lets Google’s models set a bid for every auction using signals you cannot see or replicate by hand — device, time, query, audience, and thousands more. That power is real, but it is conditional: the model needs enough recent conversions to learn what a good outcome looks like. Hand it a tight Target CPA on thin data and it has nothing to optimize toward, so it either underspends or chases noise.
The single most common failure mode is reaching for a target too early. The right sequence is to prove the funnel with Maximize Conversions (or Maximize Conversion Value for revenue goals), let it surface your achieved CPA or ROAS, and only then set a target near that number. Anchoring to reality — not to a spreadsheet wish — is what keeps volume steady when the target goes live.
Bid strategy also has to match the job. A reach campaign optimized for conversions will starve, because there is nothing for a conversion model to find; a conversion campaign on Maximize Clicks will buy cheap traffic that never converts. Getting the family right is half the decision, and it is the half spreadsheets cannot make for you.
Bid strategy by goal and signal
A practical map of which Google Ads bid strategy fits which situation. Conversion counts are trailing-30-day rules of thumb, not hard cutoffs.
| Situation | Strategy | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Conversions goal, <15 conv/30d | Maximize Conversions | Build signal before adding a target |
| Conversions goal, 15-30+ conv/30d, has target | Target CPA | Anchor to achieved CPA, tighten slowly |
| Revenue goal, thin data | Maximize Conversion Value | Pass accurate values first |
| Revenue goal, solid data, has target | Target ROAS | Set near achieved ROAS |
| Traffic goal | Maximize Clicks | Cap with a max CPC |
| Awareness goal | Target Impression Share | Bid to a visibility share |
What practitioners say about smart bidding
Automated bidding works when you feed it clean, sufficient conversion data and let it learn; it fails when you starve it of signal or change targets every other day.
Set your target close to what the account is already achieving, then move it in small steps — aggressive targets just trigger another learning phase.