Ask Why do some Google ads get many clicks but very few of those clicks turn into sales?

Clicks and sales are two very different things. An ad can attract a lot of clicks if the headline is interesting or if the offer sounds too good to pass up. But once the person lands on the page, if it is slow, confusing, or does not match what the ad promised, they leave without buying. This disconnect between the ad and the page it sends people to is one of the biggest reasons sales do not follow clicks. The ad did its job, but the page did not. So do you think the landing page matters more than the ad itself when it comes to getting sales?
 
Maybe the checkout process on the website is too long and stressful. When a customer has to fill twenty different forms and create an account just to buy a simple item, they get tired. A complicated payment system always kills the excitement of buying things online.
 
Sometimes people forget that the landing page might be the real problem here. If the website loads slowly or looks confusing, visitors will just close it immediately. An ad can look great and get clicked, but a bad website will always ruin the chance of making any sales.
 
The price of the product could be hidden until they click. When users finally see the actual cost on the website, they might change their minds and leave. Transparent pricing inside the ad text can prevent people who cannot afford the item from clicking and wasting your budget.
 
One reason this happens is that the ad promises something that the website does not fully deliver. People click because the offer sounds attractive, but once they arrive and see different pricing, features, or conditions, they lose interest and leave without making a purchase. That gap between expectation and reality can hurt sales badly.
 
Traffic alone does not guarantee customers. An ad can receive plenty of clicks from people who are curious but not ready to buy. For example, someone searching for general information may click an ad just to learn more. These visitors increase click numbers, but they often do not have strong buying intent.
 
Many clicks happen by mistake, especially when ads appear inside mobile games or apps. Children or people with big fingers tap them accidentally while trying to close a pop-up. That is why the numbers look high but nobody is actually buying anything from the store.
 
People often use Google just to compare prices before buying from a local shop near them. They click your link to check the cost, write it down, and then walk into a physical store to make the purchase. You are just helping them do research.
 
It is possible the ad is targeting the wrong country or location completely. If people from another continent are clicking because the image looks nice, they cannot buy if you do not ship to their region. Checking the location settings can fix this issue quickly.
 

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