Should You Bid on a Competitor’s Name? A Smart Guide to Budget Allocation in Google Advertising
When managing a paid advertising campaign, one of the most common and controversial questions marketers face is clients asking: “Can I bid on a competitor’s name?” The answer is technically yes—but whether you should is not as simple.
In this post, we address the pros, cons, and important considerations behind competitor bidding and how to allocate your budget in the most efficient and profitable way.
Can You Bid on a Competitor’s Name?
The short answer is “yes,” Google Ads allows you to bid on a competitor’s brand name as a keyword. While legal and technically possible, this tactic does not necessarily best serve your business.
Why It’s Usually Expensive and Less Effective
When someone searches for a competitor’s name, they are likely looking for that specific business. If your business shows up instead, you’re not exactly what they were searching for. As a result:
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Cost-per-click (CPC) tends to be significantly higher
Google charges more when your ad is a less relevant match to the searcher’s intention. -
Conversion rates are often lower
Users may click, but since they were originally looking for someone else, they may not convert. -
Your return on ad spend (ROAS) can suffer
Even if you’re seeing success elsewhere with a 5:1 ROAS, a competitor campaign may yield closer to 4:1 or even lower.
How to Allocate Your Budget
Every dollar you spend on advertising should be backed by a well thought out strategy. Before deciding to pursue a competitor bidding strategy, ask:
“Is this the best way to spend this dollar?”
Your answer should be guided by your core business objectives:
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Are you trying to maximize total budget reach?
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Is your priority to maximize profit?
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Are you looking to capture market share from direct competitors?
There’s always an opportunity cost involved. Money spent on competitor terms is money not spent promoting your own brand, where you likely have stronger relevance, better performance data, and higher conversion potential.
Strategic Scenarios Where Competitor Bidding May Make Sense for Google Ads
Competitor bidding can be useful, but only in specific situations:
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You’ve already maximized higher-performing opportunities.
If you’ve tapped out the best-converting, most relevant search terms, competitor bidding might be a logical next test. -
You can clearly communicate a value advantage.
If your offer is more compelling than your competitor’s in terms of pricing, speed, availability, support, you might sway a small portion of users actively researching alternatives.
That said, this strategy is high-effort, and typically has a low profit margin. Test carefully, measure frequently, and never put your best budget toward it until you’ve proven it can perform.
How Much Budget Should You Start With?
If you decide to test competitor bidding, start small.
We recommend a limited budget to begin. This gives you enough data to see how your ads are performing without a large financial commitment.
Keep you competitor keyword bidding campaigns separate from your main campaigns so you can easily track performance and control your ad spend. This also keeps your optimization cleaner since the audiences and intent are fundamentally different.
Why Intent Matters (A Helpful Analogy)
Imagine someone searching for a specific brand—they’ve already made a decision or are close to it. Showing them a different brand is like being an Audi dealer trying to sell a car to someone searching specifically for Mercedes.
You can show up. You can wave your flag. But you’re likely not meeting the user’s true intent, which drives up costs and lowers your chance of success.
Test, Measure, and Move Strategically
Bidding on a competitor’s name can seem like a clever shortcut to steal market share, but more often than not, it’s an expensive detour. The cost per click is higher. The conversion rate is lower. And the overall return is harder to predict.
Instead of asking “Can we do this?,” start asking “What’s the smartest and most profitable way to allocate our advertising dollars?”
Shifting to this mindset will lead you to a more efficient and sustainable paid advertising strategy.
Need help figuring out where your budget is best spent?
SC Digital curates Return on Investment-focused paid advertising strategies. Whether you are looking to refine your existing campaigns or explore new strategies like competitor bidding, we’ll help you make smarter, data-driven decisions. Get you ads done right with SC Digital.