What happened in March 2026
Across 47 client accounts, cost-per-lead spiked an average of 94% in the third week of March 2026. Some accounts saw 2.5× CPL. This was systematic, not random.
The root cause
Google rolled out a silent update to its Smart Bidding algorithm in mid-March. The update changed how the algorithm weighs conversion lag — campaigns that had historically converted within 1–3 days had their Target CPA recalculated on a broader 7–14 day attribution window.
The result: bids became too conservative, impressions dropped, and CPL spiked as only more expensive broad-match traffic remained.
The 4 fixes applied
1. Temporarily switch to Manual CPC for 5–7 days
This resets the algorithm's learning phase and restores control while Google recalibrates.
2. Reduce Target CPA by 15–20%
Counter-intuitively, a lower target tells Smart Bidding to bid more aggressively — compensating for the over-cautious new baseline.
3. Expand negative keyword library
The algorithm broadened match types aggressively. 200+ new negative keywords were added from search term reports, eliminating informational queries.
4. Rebuild critical ad groups with tight structure
For the most affected accounts, 3–5 ad groups were rebuilt with tightly themed keyword clusters and dedicated landing pages per theme.
Results
Within 14 days, 43 of the 47 accounts returned to pre-spike CPL. Average recovery time was 11 days. The remaining 4 required deeper restructuring and recovered within 21 days.
The key lesson: Smart Bidding algorithm updates require active counter-management. Waiting for Google to self-correct costs real budget.
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