Most MSPs grow two ways: referrals they cannot control, or hiring and buying their way up. Paid search is neither. Done right, it is the fast layer that sits on top of the compounding organic and AI-search base you are building, the one that produces in-market demand this quarter while the rest of the engine matures. You do not abandon the compounding engine. You put a throttle on the front of it.
The fast lever, not the only lever
SEO and GEO compound, but they take months to reach full height. Cold calling gives you the immediate gratification of activity, but it costs you your most expensive people and scales only by adding more of them. Google Ads is the third option: in-market buyers searching for managed IT in your area, today, surfaced before the organic work has fully landed. It is the layer that buys you speed while the durable engine keeps building underneath.
We run paid as a multiplier on demand, not a replacement for it. The buyer who clicks a search ad and the buyer who finds you through a referral or an AI answer are the same buyer at different moments. Paid catches the ones who are looking right now.
Why most MSP paid campaigns waste money
If you have been burned by a PPC vendor before, it usually traces to one of these:
- Broad clicks, no contracts. Bidding on "IT support" pulls in home users, job seekers, and one-off break-fix tickets. You pay for the click, your competitor signs the managed contract.
- Optimizing for the wrong finish line. Vendors report impressions, clicks, and form fills because those numbers always go up. None of them are a booked meeting or a signed agreement.
- Ignoring the sales cycle. An MSP managed-services deal does not close on the first visit. Campaigns that judge success on same-session conversions quietly bleed budget on a buyer who needed three months and four touches.
- Low search volume in a niche. Co-managed IT and vertical-specific compliance keywords have thin volume. Generic campaign structures burn the budget on the high-volume, low-intent terms instead.
The discipline you bring to managed IT rarely exists in the marketing aimed at you. We bring it.
How we run Google Ads for MSPs
Campaigns tuned for MSP economics: high-LTV managed contracts and multi-month buying cycles, not low-ticket transactions.
- Tight intent keywords. Managed IT services, co-managed IT, cybersecurity, compliance (HIPAA, CMMC, SOC 2), plus vertical and city combinations. We bid where a buyer is choosing a provider, and we exclude the terms that look like demand but are not.
- Landing pages that match the search. A click on "healthcare IT compliance, Atlanta" lands on a page about exactly that, not a generic homepage. The match is what turns a click into a booked call.
- Call and meeting tracking, not form counts. We track phone calls and booked meetings as the conversion, because that is what your pipeline is made of. The dashboard reports to opportunities and contracted revenue, not vanity metrics.
- Retargeting built for the long cycle. A buyer who visits in month one and signs in month four needs to keep seeing you in between. We stay in front of the cycle so paid demand does not leak out the back.
It is done for you. You approve the strategy and the spend, then you review pipeline. You are not writing ad copy or auditing keyword lists at 9pm.
The economics your finance partner will ask about
This is where paid search either earns its place in the budget or does not. The honest comparison is not cost-per-click. It is cost per booked opportunity against the fully loaded cost of the alternative.
- Cost per booked opportunity vs a sales hire. A salesperson carries base, commission, ramp time, management, and the risk that they do not work out. Paid search delivers booked opportunities at a measurable cost per opportunity, and you see the number every month.
- One contract pays for a lot of clicks. The gross profit on a single managed-services contract, recurring across its lifetime, is large relative to a month of ad spend. The math only needs to work on a fraction of the opportunities to clear the spend.
- You can throttle spend. You cannot un-hire fast. If a quarter is tight, you dial paid down next week with no severance, no morale hit, no notice period. A sales hire is a fixed cost you carry whether the pipeline is full or not. Paid demand is the variable cost you control.
We report against payback, not impressions. If a campaign is not producing booked opportunities at a cost that beats your alternative, you should know within the month and reallocate, not discover it a year later.
The objections worth saying out loud
"We need salespeople, not more marketing."
Paid search feeds salespeople. Instead of your team cold-dialing strangers for immediate gratification, they work warm, in-market buyers who already raised their hand by searching for a provider. Same closers, far better conversations. This makes the sales function you have more productive, it does not compete with it.
"PPC is a money pit."
It is, when it reports to clicks. We report to pipeline and contracted revenue. Every dollar maps to a booked opportunity or it gets cut. The money pit is what happens when nobody ties spend to a contract. We tie it on day one.
"Our search volume is too low to bother."
Niche volume is a feature, not a bug. Fewer searches, but every one of them is a buyer actively choosing a managed IT provider. We would rather own the 40 high-intent searches a month in your vertical and city than waste budget on 4,000 irrelevant ones.
The proof
We run growth for MSPs, not generic B2B. With Cortavo, an MSP we work with, the program generated roughly a million dollars in pipeline and over 210,000 dollars in contracted revenue inside the first six months. With Eden Data, the organic engine grew traffic about 11.6 times in roughly six months. Paid is one lever inside that integrated motion, the one that buys speed while the compounding work builds.
Where to start
The fastest way to see whether paid belongs in your mix is a 20-minute teardown of your current search presence and where in-market demand is leaking. We will show you what high-intent buyers in your area are searching, what it would cost to reach them, and whether the cost per booked opportunity clears your bar. No retainer to find out.