If the advertisement will have a strong financial return, there needs to be a valid/significant measurement, effective conversion, and clear consent signals must be obtained and continued to provide the use of first-party data as your workflow for building and measuring the success of advertisements through campaign structure and reporting against historical campaigns.
The first rule when hiring any paid media team is to think about ownership. An agency should ensure that the client owns the paid media advertisement accounts, the payment profile, the website tags/pixels, the product feeds, and any other analytic properties associated with each campaign.
This configuration makes the agency ad account more auditable, transferable, secure, and scalable.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Clients must directly own all ad accounts, payment profiles, pixels, and data feeds to guarantee business continuity and security.
- Access permissions must be strictly segmented by job function to protect sensitive configurations and billing data.
- The multi-segmented, hyper-split campaigns of the past are obsolete; 2026 algorithms require clean, consolidated structures to gather data and learn efficiently.
- Success is measured by deep-funnel business actions rather than surface-level metrics like raw clicks or impressions.
One of the first tasks you’ll need to do when creating an ad account is to determine ownership and administration roles.
Typically, the company that will use the account (or pay for the ad) will own the account but have a third-party agency manage it in conjunction with their partner or manager, ensuring that business continuity is maintained and that all data (campaign history) and billing issues remain in order.
Working for an agency may appear to be faster initially, especially if you have no accounts with any of your small bookkeeping clients. However, it leads to lasting conflicts. Access to the accounts can be challenging when a client changes agencies, the agency moves media buying in-house or when a client asks for an audit.
| Setup model | Main advantage | Main risk |
| Client-owned account | Clear ownership and easier handover | Client must manage access responsibly |
| Agency-owned account | Faster initial setup | Client may lose data, history, or control |
| Shared structure | Flexible for complex teams | Requires strong documentation |
Access for users should be granted using the least privilege way. According to Google’s official security guidelines, users should only be granted access to the minimum amount of information required to perform their job function. You should also have different levels of access based on the user’s job function.
Don’t grant admin permissions to all strategists for day-to-day operations. The admin access should be given to only those who have a genuine need to manage users, billing, account links and sensitive settings.
The simple access structure works well:
Google Ads has a built-in expiration policy for access, which allows you to make your user’s account and password available for only a certain amount of time, thus enabling you to revoke access to users who have only needed access to the account for a one-time event (e.g., an audit, migration, freelance, or troubleshooting).
Ensure Good Set-Up Before Launching Campaigns. The agency will need to collect data/information on your business context: how your customers’ products are maintained, what technical access they have, what level of performance history they can provide you, compliance data (if applicable), and expected reporting requirements. Failure to do so can result in duplicated pixels, incorrect conversions, inaccurate reporting/campaigns optimized for poor-quality leads.
The set-up should provide an answer to the following four practical questions:
As an example, a completed form could be classified as a conversion, however, the booking of the meeting would be the action that would ultimately determine the revenue generated from this lead source. It can scale volume but lead quality will decrease if every lead is optimized for the same account.
Campaign structure for agencies should be easy to read and strong enough to support optimization. In the past, many PPC accounts were split into too many campaigns, ad groups, audiences, and keyword variations. In 2026, that often creates thin data and slower learning.
A cleaner structure usually works better. Separate campaigns by business goal, market, funnel stage, or product line only when the budget and reporting need justify it.
Example naming convention:
US | Search | NonBrand | CRM Software | Lead | tCPA | 2026-01
This format shows the market, channel, brand status, offer, conversion goal, bidding method, and launch period. Good ad account naming conventions reduce confusion, speed up audits, and make reporting easier.
Media buying has become a business of tracking quality. If the account sends out weak and inaccurate signals, it’s impossible to optimize the campaign properly. Agencies should test conversion events, review consent behavior, analyse analytics data and ensure the correct data flow in the CRM and offline channels.
An example of an audit process is a website test, that checks once completed if exists on ad platform, analytics tool, and CRM. If any of these platforms cannot track the website test, reporting will ultimately fail.
If possible, the account should progress beyond traffic from just simple form fills when it comes to lead generation. Qualified leads, booked calls, opportunities, and closed revenue are better indicators than raw lead volume.
The ad account audit must be more than just campaign metrics. While conversions, CTR, CPC, and spend are important, they don’t provide a true picture of the account’s health. A fair audit also assesses reporting quality, policy issues, rejected ads, naming, access, tracking and billing, and ownership.
| Audit area | What to check | Why it matters |
| Access | Unknown admins or former vendors | Prevents unauthorized changes |
| Tracking | Missing or duplicate events | Protects optimization quality |
| Structure | Too many low-data campaigns | Improves learning and control |
| Billing | Unclear payment ownership | Reduces financial disputes |
| Reporting | Platform data vs. CRM data | Shows real business impact |
A common issue: the client updates a website form, the thank-you page changes, and the old conversion event keeps firing incorrectly. The dashboard still looks stable, but sales quality drops. This is why website changes should always trigger a tracking review.
The report should consist of the following at a min:
• What was changed?
• Why was it changed?
• What is going to happen next;
• Clients should be provided with reports related to the activity levels that have generated demand, not solely based on metrics such as impressions and clicks.
The best reports are those that relate ad spend and commercial results. For ecommerce, these could be revenue, ROAS, profit margin, and repeat purchasers. For lead generation, this could be qualified leads, sales accepted leads, booked demos, pipeline value, and cost per opportunity.
Billing agreements should be agreed upon before the beginning of the campaign. Clients should have access to their credit cards in order to receive bills through the ad platform (preferable) and not through the bank. The agency may control pacing or budget recommendations but must keep financial documents on file.
It should also specify who has budget approval authority, what is done when payments are not made, what to do if a campaign goes over budget and when to stop a campaign. Details don’t seem to matter until they do.
A well-managed account should be simple to pass on at any time. This isn’t an indication that the agency will not retain the client. It implies the account is organized, documented and healthy.
An account in good standing has the ability to be transferred easily. This will not necessarily mean that they will not retain the agency. It indicates that the account has documentation in order, and is performing well.
Ownership, access control, clean tracking, readable structure, and business-focused reporting are the best practices for an agency ad account in 2026. The core assets should be owned by the client. The agency should run campaigns with appropriate permissions, record campaign setups, safeguard campaign measurement quality, and link actual campaign performance to actual commercial results.
The correct representation of an agency’s ad account is not the number of campaigns in it or the sophistication of the dashboard, but how well-managed an account is. The one that has a clear purpose for each user, event, campaign, budget and report.