If you’ve ever launched an online ad campaign and wondered why it took forever to start working… you’re not alone.
Most business owners unknowingly handicap their ads from Day 1. And lately, I’ve been using AI to fix that—fast.

In this week’s episode of AI-Fueled Growth, Zach and I dug into a step-by-step method for creating Google Ads with AI that’s producing some of our best results yet. I even filmed the whole process so you can see exactly how it works.

Why “Slow and Steady” Ads Are Slowing You Down
Running $5/day for 30 days sounds cautious… but it also starves Google’s algorithm of the data it needs to actually target the right people.

Instead, try front-loading your ad budget—spending more in the first 7–10 days so Google learns faster. Once it dials in the right audience, you can scale back without losing momentum.

I break down the math and show you exactly how to try this yourself here:
📖 Why Front-Loading Your Ad Budget Beats the Slow-and-Steady Approach

GPT-5 vs Claude—The AI Showdown
When GPT-5 dropped, I expected a major upgrade. Instead, it broke one of my core workflows: picking up past conversations without starting over.

That sent me back to Claude, an AI I hadn’t paid for in years. Turns out, Claude is now excellent for analytical work like ad performance reviews and ROI calculations.

I compared them side-by-side so you can see which one to use for different marketing tasks:
📖 GPT-5 vs Claude: Which AI Should You Trust With Your Marketing?

Quick Win of the Week:
If you’re running ads—on Google, Meta, or anywhere else—try this simple experiment:

  1. Spend more in the first 10 days.

  2. Use AI (Claude or ChatGPT) to walk you through each step of setup.

  3. Review the results weekly and tweak based on performance data.

It’s a faster path to profitable campaigns.

Watch the Full Walkthrough
My latest video shows exactly how I build high-performing Google Ads using AI, start to finish. You’ll see how to feed AI the right context, interpret its advice, and avoid the mistakes most small businesses make.

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