Most companies start with a single channel: either Google Ads or Meta Ads (Facebook and Instagram). That’s natural – it’s easier to manage one platform, one invoicing system, one reporting source. The problem is that your users don’t live in just one channel. They might see an ad on social media, later type your brand name into Google, and finally come back via remarketing. Only when Google Ads and Meta Ads work together do you start seeing the full picture and better sales performance. As an agency, we run both Google Ads and Meta Ads campaigns for our clients and also train in-house teams on both systems. Thanks to this, we see which mistakes are most common and how dramatically the results change once the channels are managed together instead of in separate silos.
📝 What you’ll learn from this article:Although both systems are forms of online advertising, they operate in completely different user contexts.
Google Ads is advertising based on intent. A user types a query like “burgundy wedding dress” or “Google Ads agency” into the search bar, which clearly signals that they are looking for something. Your ads – whether in Search or Shopping/Product campaigns – appear at the moment they’re actively seeking a solution. This is where you can intercept existing demand.
Meta Ads (Facebook, Instagram) is advertising based on attention and interests. Users scroll their feed, watch Stories, browse Reels. They’re not necessarily looking for a product at that moment – but you can stop them with creative, an offer, or emotion. This channel is excellent for building brand awareness, engagement, and “planting the seed” of a need, which may later surface as a branded search in Google.
If you only operate in one of these channels, you see only part of the reality. Only Search? You don’t build demand, you mainly fight for the “last click.” Only Meta? You build awareness but give your competitors the advantage at the final decision stage.
For the two systems to work together, you must clearly define what each of them is responsible for at different stages of the customer journey.
➡️ Google Ads works best when the customer:
Search and Shopping/Product campaigns act as a highly effective “receiver” of traffic that was previously warmed up in other channels. Additionally, Display and remarketing campaigns remind people who have already visited your site but haven’t purchased yet.
➡️ Meta Ads has the advantage wherever you need to:
Thanks to targeting options (interests, behaviors, lookalike audiences), Meta Ads performs very well at the top and middle of the funnel – where you’re still building the need and getting users familiar with your brand. Later, when the same person types your brand or product type into Google, Search campaigns can “close” the sale.
As an agency, we also teach this funnel-based mindset in our Google Ads and Meta Ads trainings – we show how to think in terms of the whole funnel instead of a single campaign in one platform.
Combining both channels isn’t just about running them “in parallel.” The point is for their results to actively reinforce each other.
A nice idea about synergy isn’t enough. You need a concrete framework: shared strategy, consistent data, and clear goals. Below is a logical order of work that we also use in our client projects.
First you need to answer a few questions: what role should Meta Ads play and what role should Google Ads play? Which KPIs are a priority for each? Are you measuring only sales, or also micro-conversions (newsletter sign-ups, add-to-cart, video views)?
If each channel has different goals, different conversion definitions, and separate reporting, it’s hard to talk about synergy. Start by defining a shared funnel (top, middle, bottom) and only then map Google and Meta activities to those stages.
No matter how powerful the ad platforms are, you need one place where:
Most often, that role is played by Google Analytics 4 combined with Looker Studio or another BI tool. The key elements are:
When working with clients, we often start by cleaning up analytics – and in our GA4 and ads trainings, we show how to interpret differences between platforms.
There is no magic split like “60% Google, 40% Meta,” because it depends on your industry, margins, and funnel length. Still, a few healthy principles apply:
The budget should follow the channel’s role: Meta is more about driving demand and traffic; Google is more about capturing intent and closing the sale. Strategy’s job is to build one coherent system rather than just “throwing more budget” at whichever platform looks better in the panel right now.
Users don’t distinguish between your Meta ad and your Google ad – they just see your brand. If one channel advertises a -10% discount and another promises -30%, there’s a disconnect. If Meta Ads builds a branding message while Search uses completely different language, you lose the impact of repetition.
That’s why it’s worth:
As an agency, we often combine this with workshops or trainings for client teams – so everyone, from performance to content, speaks with one consistent brand voice.
➡️ After analyzing many accounts, we see several recurring issues.
Separate teams, separate goals
One agency runs Google Ads, another runs Meta Ads, and the client tries to stitch everything together in Excel. Each side pulls the budget toward its own platform. The result? No one owns the entire funnel, and decisions are based on fragmented insight.
No unified analytics
Google Ads reports one thing, Meta reports another, GA4 says something else – and no one trusts any of it. Instead of asking the hard question, “How are conversions and attribution models set up?”, it’s easier to just say “the data is wrong.” In reality, consistent analytics is the foundation of meaningful synergy.
Focusing only on the bottom of the funnel
Many companies invest only in Search and remarketing – in both Google and Meta. This works for a while, as long as you’re feeding off existing traffic and brand awareness. Once that pool dries up, results drop and acquisition costs rise. Without top-of-funnel activity in Meta Ads, it’s hard to talk about scalable growth.
No control over frequency and creative fatigue
It’s very easy to “burn out” campaigns in Meta Ads – users see the same creative ten or more times, with no reflection in sales. Meanwhile, branded searches increase in Google Ads, and no one ties this to worn-out campaigns on social. A shared look at the data helps catch such situations early.
Because we run campaigns in both Google Ads and Meta Ads, we design them as a single system, not as two separate worlds.
➡️ In practice, this means:
We also offer trainings in Google Ads, Meta Ads, and analytics, so you can build some of the competence within your own team. More and more often, we work in a hybrid model: the client runs part of the campaigns internally after training, and we take care of strategy, more complex formats, and optimization of the whole system.
If you’re currently running campaigns in only one system or both channels operate independently, a sensible starting point is:
Google Ads and Meta Ads are not competitors. They are two tools serving the same user at different stages of their buying decision. When they work in isolation, you’re putting out fires in one place without seeing where the flames appear elsewhere. Once you start managing them as a single system – with one strategy, unified analytics, and clearly defined roles – you’ll see customer acquisition costs go down and revenue grow more predictably.
If you want to combine your Meta Ads and Google Ads activity into one coherent, profitable system, we can help you both as an agency running your campaigns and as a training partner strengthening your team’s skills. All it takes is an initial conversation – the rest comes down to a solid strategy and consistent work based on data.

Content Marketing Specialist