If you’ve ever run ads and thought “this just doesn’t work”…
there’s a high chance the problem wasn’t the platform.
It was the budget.
Most businesses don’t spend enough to generate meaningful data, which means they never reach the point where ads actually start working.
This guide breaks down what you really need to spend, what affects that number, and how to scale once it clicks.
The Short Answer (No Fluff)
If you want real results:
- Local service businesses (trades, construction): £500–£1,500/month minimum
- Lead generation (competitive markets): £1,500–£5,000/month
- Ecommerce brands: £2,000–£10,000+/month
Anything below this usually leads to:
- Inconsistent leads
- No learning phase completion
- False negatives (“ads don’t work”)
Why Most Ad Budgets Fail
It’s not that ads are expensive.
It’s that they need enough data to optimise.
Platforms like Meta Platforms and Google rely on data to improve performance.
If your budget is too low:
- The algorithm can’t learn who converts
- You don’t generate enough clicks or conversions
- Performance stays random
Result: You quit before it works.
The Real Rule: Budget Based on Cost Per Result
Instead of guessing a budget, use this:
Formula:
Monthly Budget = Target Cost Per Lead × Desired Leads
Example:
- Cost per lead = £25
- You want 40 leads
→ £25 × 40 = £1,000/month
This is how pros actually set budgets.
What Affects How Much You Need to Spend
1. Industry Competition
Highly competitive niches (legal, finance, construction) cost more per click and per lead.
- Roofer lead: £20–£60
- Solicitor lead: £80–£200+
More competition = higher required budget.
2. Platform Choice
- Google Ads = high intent (people searching now)
- Meta Ads = demand generation (people not actively searching yet)
Google often works faster but costs more per click.
Meta is cheaper but needs more data to optimise.
3. Your Website (This Is Where Most Lose Money)
You can spend £3,000/month on ads…
but if your site is poor, you’ll get poor results.
Your website needs to:
- Load fast
- Look trustworthy
- Make it easy to enquire
Better conversion rate = lower cost per lead = lower budget needed.
4. Your Follow-Up System
Most businesses lose money after the lead comes in.
If you:
- Miss calls
- Reply late
- Don’t follow up
You’ll think ads don’t work… when actually your system doesn’t.
The Biggest Mistake: Starting Too Small
A £5–£10/day budget sounds safe.
It isn’t.
At that level:
- You won’t exit the learning phase
- You’ll get inconsistent data
- You’ll make decisions too early
It’s like trying to start a fire with one spark and walking away.
What “Seeing Results” Actually Means
A lot of people expect instant profit.
Realistically, ads go through 3 stages:
1. Testing Phase (Weeks 1–3)
- Finding what works
- Higher costs, inconsistent results
2. Optimisation Phase (Weeks 3–8)
- Cost per lead drops
- More consistent enquiries
3. Scaling Phase (Month 2+)
- Predictable lead flow
- Profitable growth
If you stop before phase 2… you never win.
A Simple Budget Framework That Actually Works
Keep it simple:
Step 1: Start with a realistic budget (£1k+ for most)
Step 2: Run for at least 30 days
Step 3: Track cost per lead and conversion rate
Step 4: Improve website + follow-up
Step 5: Scale what works
Real Example (Trade Business)
- Ad spend: £1,000/month
- Leads: 40
- Cost per lead: £25
- Close rate: 25%
- Jobs won: 10
- Avg job value: £3,000
→ Revenue: £30,000
→ Ad spend: £1,000
That’s how ads actually work when done properly.
When You Should Increase Your Budget
Scale when:
- Cost per lead is stable
- You’re closing jobs profitably
- Your pipeline is consistent
Don’t scale when:
- Leads are inconsistent
- You haven’t fixed conversion issues
Final Takeaway
Ads don’t fail because they’re expensive.
They fail because they’re underfunded and unsupported.
If you want results:
- Spend enough to generate data
- Fix your website
- Improve your follow-up
- Give it time to optimise
That’s when ads stop feeling like a gamble…
and start feeling like a system.