This is the question we hear more than any other from business owners considering paid media: "Should I spend on Google or Meta?"
The answer — like most good business answers — is: it depends. But it doesn't depend on what platform has better technology. It depends on your business model, how people buy what you sell, and what you're trying to accomplish right now.
Let's break it down so you can make the right choice for your situation.
Here's what Google is: a demand capture engine. Someone knows they want or need something, they go to Google, and they search for it. Your ads appear when they type those words. You're not creating the need — the need already exists. You're just showing up at the moment they're looking to solve it.
This is incredibly powerful because these are high-intent users. Someone searching "best CRM for small business" has intent. Someone searching "accountant near me" has intent. Someone searching "how to fix a leaky faucet" has intent. They're not browsing. They're actively looking to buy or solve a problem.
If you're a consultant, accountant, plumber, contractor, dentist, or any service-based business, Google is typically your first move. Why? Because the people who are searching for your services are your exact customers. They're ready. They're looking. They have money to spend. And they're ready to spend it now, not someday.
Someone searching "SEO agency San Diego" right now is in your market. They're in buying mode. They're comparing you to your competitors. If your Google ad appears first with a clear offer and a good landing page, they click. They reach out. You close the deal in weeks, not months.
Costs vary dramatically by industry. A click for "personal injury lawyer" can run $30-$50. A click for a local service might be $5-$15. Competitive industries cost more. Less competitive keywords cost less. But here's what matters: if a Google click costs $10 and you close one deal per ten clicks, your cost per acquisition is $100. If that deal is worth $5,000 or $10,000, that's a fantastic ROI.
The key is landing pages. A generic landing page won't convert. A well-built landing page that addresses the exact search query will convert 10-15% of clicks to leads. Do that consistently, and Google pays for itself in months.
One more thing about Google: if your competitors aren't bidding on it yet, costs are low and volume is available. That window closes fast. Once your competitors catch on, costs go up and inventory drops. If you're going to move on Google, move now.
Meta (Facebook and Instagram) is the opposite. Meta is a demand creation engine. Nobody opens Instagram and thinks "I need to solve this problem." They open it to scroll, see friends, look at inspiration. Your ads appear in that feed. Your job isn't capturing existing demand — it's creating it.
This is a completely different game. You're not catching people at the moment they're ready to buy. You're introducing them to your product, showing them why they need it, building awareness, and starting a relationship that might turn into a purchase weeks or months later.
If you're selling a physical product — apparel, supplements, accessories, home goods — Meta is incredibly powerful. Why? Because visual storytelling sells products. Someone sees an ad for a comfortable t-shirt while scrolling. It looks good. They click. They read the product page. They see the price. If it's compelling, they buy. The entire conversion happens in 5-10 minutes.
E-commerce works on Meta because impulse matters. Someone might not have thought they wanted your product 30 seconds ago, but the right visual at the right moment can change that. They see it, they like it, they buy it.
Brand building also works on Meta because repetition works. You can't build brand awareness in five people. You need to reach thousands of people multiple times so your brand is familiar and trustworthy by the time they're ready to buy.
CPMs (cost per thousand impressions) on Meta typically range from $2-$8 depending on your audience and targeting. So you can reach 1,000 people for $2-$8. That's cheap reach. But it's also low-intent reach. Many of those people have no interest in your product. So while the cost per impression is low, the cost per customer acquisition is often higher than Google.
Typical Meta ROI for e-commerce: if you spend $1, you want to get back $3-$4 in immediate sales. Anything less and you're not profitable at scale. If you're getting $2 back per $1 spent, that works for building brand awareness and long-term customers, but you need other revenue streams to make it sustainable.
For services on Meta: it takes longer. You're not getting immediate conversions. You're building familiarity. An accountant running Meta ads to build awareness might spend money for months before those warm prospects convert. That only works if you have the cash flow to sustain it.
Google CPC (cost per click) varies wildly: Legal and finance average $15-$50. Home services and HVAC average $10-$30. Local services average $5-$20. E-commerce averages $2-$8. Less competitive niches can be $1-$5.
Meta CPM (cost per thousand impressions) is more consistent: Most industries average $3-$6 CPM. Conversion happens on a tiny percentage of impressions, so effective cost per lead is often $10-$50 depending on relevance and creative quality.
Bottom line: Google is usually cheaper per qualified lead. Meta is cheaper per impression but more expensive per actual customer. The comparison only matters if you understand your conversion rates on each platform.
Use this framework to decide:
Start with Google. You're capturing active demand. High-intent users are searching for you. Conversion happens fast. ROI is immediate. Get Google dialed in first. Then layer in Meta for long-term brand building.
Start with Meta. Visual storytelling sells. Impulse buying happens. You can test creative and messaging fast. Once you've proven your product sells, layer in Google Shopping to capture people actively searching for what you sell.
This is complicated. B2B buyers don't impulse buy on Meta. They're not scrolling Instagram looking for enterprise software. But they do search for solutions on Google. Start with Google, but combine it with LinkedIn for more qualified professional targeting.
Meta first. You need reach and frequency. You need people to see your brand multiple times before they trust it enough to buy. Google only works if people are already searching for the category you're in.
The best marketing strategies layer multiple channels. You start with the platform that matches your business model and immediate goal. But once you understand the game, you add the other platform.
A service business runs Google to capture active demand. Then they run Meta to build brand awareness so more people are ready to search on Google. The two amplify each other. A dollar on Meta builds awareness. That awareness leads to more searches on Google. More Google searches lead to more business. Some of that business comes back to Meta ads because they recognize your brand.
An e-commerce business runs Meta to drive sales. Then they add Google Shopping to capture people searching for the exact product. And Google Search for people searching the problem your product solves. Multiple channels working together beat any single channel.
You need to spend enough to get statistically significant results. A $500 test tells you almost nothing. A $2,000-$5,000 test starts to show you real data. If you can't commit to spending that, don't start yet.
You cannot send Google or Meta traffic to your homepage. You need dedicated landing pages. Each ad should go to a page that directly addresses the ad's promise. If your Google ad says "Free Accountant Consultation," the landing page should be about scheduling that consultation, not about your company's history.
If you can't track which platform actually generated customers, you're flying blind. Set up conversion tracking before you spend a dollar. Google Analytics, CRM integration, pixel setup — all of it matters. You can't optimize what you don't measure.
Google and Meta are tools for different jobs. Google captures demand that already exists. Meta creates new demand. Pick the platform that matches your business model. Spend enough to get real data. Build good landing pages. Track everything. Then optimize relentlessly.
Do that, and paid ads become one of the most predictable, scalable parts of your business. Get it wrong, and you just threw money away.
Not sure which platform to start with? We'll analyze your business and build a paid media strategy that works.
We'll help you choose the right platform for your business, build a realistic budget, and show you exactly what ROI looks like.
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