Google has spent the last 3 years pushing Performance Max (PMax) as the answer to every advertiser’s prayers. “Just upload assets, set a goal, and Google’s AI handles the rest.”
For e-commerce, PMax often works. For service businesses, it’s more complicated — and the wrong choice can drain budget for weeks before you realise.
Here’s the honest comparison.
What each one actually does
Search Ads = your text ad shows up when someone types a query that matches your keyword. You control the keyword, the match type, the ad copy, and (mostly) the audience.
Performance Max = you give Google your assets (text, images, video, logos), set a conversion goal, and Google’s automation decides where to show your ad — Search, YouTube, Gmail, Display, Maps, Discover, all of it.
PMax trades control for reach. Search trades reach for control.
When Search Ads win
For most service businesses (clinics, lawyers, accountants, repair services, B2B), Search Ads outperform PMax. Reasons:
- Intent is everything. Someone typing “AC repair Banani price” is 50× closer to buying than someone watching a YouTube video. Search captures that intent directly.
- You control the negative keywords. PMax’s biggest weakness is irrelevant traffic. Search lets you systematically exclude wrong-fit queries.
- Cost per lead is usually lower. Across my service-business accounts, Search Ads consistently produce 30–70% lower CPL than PMax for the same offer.
If your business runs on phone calls, in-person bookings, or quote requests, start with Search.
When Performance Max wins
PMax shines when:
- You sell something with strong visual appeal (e-commerce products, real estate listings, training programs)
- You have a wide product/service catalogue (Google’s automation needs lots of variations to optimize)
- You’re already running profitable Search and want to scale beyond the search query ceiling
For an e-commerce brand with 200 SKUs and Google Merchant Center set up, PMax is a no-brainer. For a 4-person law firm, it’ll burn budget on YouTube placements that don’t convert.
The CPL data I see
Across active client accounts (mid-2026), here’s what I see:
| Industry | Search CPL | PMax CPL |
|---|---|---|
| Local home services | ৳180–400 | ৳350–700 |
| Healthcare clinics | ৳250–500 | ৳400–900 |
| B2B SaaS / services | ৳800–2,500 | ৳1,500–4,000 |
| E-commerce (avg ticket ৳2K+) | ৳200–400 (per sale) | ৳150–300 (per sale) |
| Education / courses | ৳150–400 | ৳200–600 |
E-commerce is the only category where PMax beats Search on CPL. For everything service-flavoured, Search is cheaper.
The “PMax steals credit” problem
Here’s the trap: when you run Search and PMax in the same account, PMax often steals credit for conversions that Search caused. Someone clicks your Search ad, doesn’t convert, then sees a PMax retargeting ad on YouTube, comes back, converts. PMax claims the conversion.
This makes PMax look better than it is. The fix: use Search Term Insights and Account Performance reports to see true incremental impact, not just last-click attribution.
A practical service-business setup
For most service-business clients, this is the structure I run:
-
Search campaign — high-intent keywords
- Exact and phrase match for 10–25 buying-intent keywords
- Tight ad groups (5–10 keywords each)
- Aggressive negative keyword list (re-checked weekly)
-
Search campaign — branded
- Your business name + competitor names
- Cheap, high-intent, defends against competitors bidding on your brand
-
PMax — only after Search is profitable
- Used as scaling layer once Search is at its ceiling
- Asset groups separated by service line
- Excluded brand search (so PMax can’t steal branded credit)
That’s it. Three campaigns. No “smart bidding miracle” — just clean structure with clear roles.
What to skip
- Display campaigns for service businesses — almost never worth it.
- YouTube ads unless you have professional video and a real funnel.
- DSA (Dynamic Search Ads) until you have a high-quality, deep website.
- Optimised targeting with broad keywords on a small budget — it’ll spray spend everywhere with nothing to show.
A note on conversion tracking
PMax requires excellent conversion tracking to work at all. If your tracking is broken or set up loosely (e.g. “page view” as a conversion), PMax’s algorithm optimizes for the wrong outcome and you waste 100% of your budget.
Before launching ANY Google Ads campaign:
- Set up enhanced conversions with first-party data
- Track valuable conversions only (form submits, calls over 60s, scheduled appointments — not page views)
- Verify the conversion fires correctly using Google Tag Assistant
If conversion tracking isn’t right, no amount of campaign optimization will save you.
Bottom line
For service businesses in Bangladesh and beyond, Search Ads beat Performance Max in 2026. Start with Search, prove ROI, then layer PMax on top to scale. Anyone telling you to “just run PMax and let Google figure it out” is either selling course content or hasn’t run a real ads account in the last year.
Search first. PMax second. Track properly. Skip Display.