"Should I hire a Google Ads consultant or an agency?" is the wrong first question. The right one is: what do you actually need bought — advice, execution, or a team? Those are three different products, and matching the wrong one to your situation is how businesses overpay or underperform.
Here's how to tell them apart, from someone who spent a decade managing every kind of advertiser through wins and failures.
The three options, and what each actually sells
| Consultant | Freelancer | Agency | |
|---|---|---|---|
| You're buying | Judgment + roadmap | Hands-on management, solo | A team |
| Who executes | You / your team | The freelancer | The agency |
| Best for spend | Any (with in-house exec) | $1K-$15K/mo | $5K-$100K+/mo |
| Typical cost | $100-$300/hr or $500-$3K project | $500-$2,500/mo | 15-25% of spend or retainer |
| Scales to multi-channel | Advice only | Rarely | Yes |
| Risk | You depend on your own execution | Single point of failure | Junior handoffs, account bloat |
A Google Ads consultant
Sells judgment. They audit your account, set the strategy, and hand you (or your in-house marketer) a prioritized plan. You execute. This is the right fit when you have someone who can implement but not strategize — a capable marketing generalist who needs senior direction. You're not paying for ongoing management; you're paying for the roadmap and the occasional course-correction.
A Google Ads freelancer
Both advises and executes, usually solo. Often the most affordable for smaller accounts, and you get direct access to the person doing the work. The risk is concentration: one person's bandwidth, one person's blind spots, no backup if they're unavailable. Great for a focused single-channel account; strained when you need paid + landing pages + analytics + creative.
A Google Ads agency
Provides a team — strategist, execution, reporting, often CRO and creative support. Scales to larger budgets and multi-channel work where coordination matters. The two failure modes to screen for: (1) the senior who sells you the engagement isn't the one running it (junior handoff), and (2) account bloat — 20 campaigns where 5 would do. A good agency avoids both.
How to choose
Ask three questions:
- Do you have someone in-house who can execute well? If yes, a consultant or audit may be all you need — buy the strategy, run it yourself. If no, you need a freelancer or agency who does the hands-on work.
- How much are you spending per month? Under ~$5K, a freelancer or a focused consultant is usually right (we've sized the whole decision for small budgets in PPC management for small business). Above ~$5K, or across multiple channels, an agency's team depth starts to pay for itself.
- Is this one channel or a system? If Google Ads is your only paid channel, a specialist freelancer can carry it. If paid, SEO, landing pages, and analytics all need to work together, a team that owns the whole stack avoids the coordination tax.
The question that matters more than the title
Whatever you hire — consultant, freelancer, or agency — the single best diagnostic question is: "Do you optimize against form-fills or against closed revenue?"
The ones who optimize against form-fills (because it's what the dashboard shows) drive cheap, unqualified leads that look good in reports and never close. The ones who wire your CRM back to Google with offline conversions and let Smart Bidding optimize for actual customers are the ones worth paying — at any of the three tiers. If they can't answer that question clearly, the title on their business card doesn't matter.
Where MyLeadsFactory fits
We're a senior-led agency: a senior strategist runs your account directly — no junior handoff, no SDR queue. We work month-to-month with no long contracts, and you always own your ad account. If you're not sure whether you need a consultant, a freelancer, or a full team, the free audit will tell you honestly — sometimes the answer is "your in-house person just needs a roadmap," and we'll say so.
Book a free 30-minute audit and a senior strategist will walk your account in a recorded Loom you keep — whichever direction you end up going.