If your Bing Ads campaigns are not generating strong ROI, the most common reason is that you’re making avoidable mistakes that quietly drain your budget, limit conversions, and weaken your overall performance. Many advertisers assume Bing is simply a “smaller Google Ads,” but that assumption alone leads to missteps—from targeting errors to poor landing pages—that dramatically reduce profitability. Fixing these issues doesn’t require extra ad spend; it requires understanding exactly where campaigns leak money and applying proven optimization disciplines. If you want to stop wasting ad spend and start seeing real results from Bing Ads, our expert Bing Ads management services can help you audit, optimize, and scale campaigns efficiently. Here’s a breakdown of the top mistakes that may be killing your ROI—and how to fix them.
The worst mistake advertisers make is assuming that Bing Ads works identically to Google Ads. Yes, both platforms share similar features, but the audience, intent, device usage, and CPC dynamics differ significantly. When advertisers copy their Google Ads campaigns into Bing without adjustment, performance typically tanks.
Bing has an older, more mature demographic (often with higher income and desktop-heavy usage).
Search intent varies, so Google keywords don’t always translate.
Bing’s CTR and CPC can differ dramatically across industries.
Ad extensions and audience targeting behave slightly differently.
Rebuild—not just import—campaigns. Use Bing-specific keyword research.
Analyze device and demographic performance instead of using Google assumptions.
Customize ad copy to match Bing’s audience style.
Broad match can work on Bing, but using it without guardrails is one of the fastest ways to destroy ROI. The platform tends to trigger broader interpretations of queries than many advertisers expect.
Irrelevant traffic pours in, especially for single-word keywords.
Bing’s AI aggressively expands search queries to “close variants,” sometimes too loosely.
Low-quality clicks waste budget and dilute conversion tracking.
Use broad match with audience filters like In-Market Audiences.
Add negative keywords aggressively (weekly or daily, depending on spend).
Start with exact and phrase match, then scale into controlled broad match when stable.
If you do not actively manage negative keywords on Bing Ads, your ROI will sink—fast. Bing’s keyword matching requires tighter refinement than many advertisers expect.
Bing may match your ads to unrelated queries that only share partial phrases.
Competitor names, research queries, job-seeker phrases, and mis-intent terms can slip in.
Wasted spend can climb 20–40% without negative keyword maintenance.
Build shared negative lists by category (research terms, wrong intent, competitor brands).
Review search term reports at least twice a week.
Continually update your master exclusion list across all campaigns.
Many advertisers rely solely on keyword targeting, but Bing’s audience features have become extremely powerful. Ignoring them limits your ROI potential.
You miss high-intent users from in-market segments.
You waste money by showing ads to low-quality, low-purchase-intent audiences.
Competitors who layer audiences outperform you with the same keywords.
Add in-market audiences at +10% to +30% bid adjustments.
Use remarketing lists for higher-intent users.
Create “exclude” audiences for low-value segments.
Misconfigured geo-targeting silently drains budgets more than almost any other mistake. Bing tends to show ads outside intended regions if targeting isn’t set correctly.
Bing’s default setting shows ads to “People in, or who show interest in your targeted locations.”
This means people outside your target areas may see (and click) your ads.
CPC can skyrocket if competition in unintended regions is high.
Change settings to: “People in your targeted locations.”
Exclude unwanted countries, states, or regions manually.
Check search term location reports weekly.
Bing automatically includes the Audience Network (its Display-like placements) unless you turn it off. Many advertisers accidentally mix traffic sources, causing ROI volatility.
Audience Network placements often have lower intent than search.
CTR and CVR drop significantly when search and display are combined.
Display-style placements can burn budget with minimal conversions.
Separate Search and Audience campaigns.
Track performance individually.
Scale Audience Network only if it shows profitable CPAs.
Even with great keywords, poor ad copy sabotages ROI. Bing users respond differently to style, clarity, and offer presentation.
Generic ad text leads to lower CTR and Quality Score.
Lower Quality Scores directly increase CPC.
Ads that fail to match intent cause conversion drop-off even before the visitor lands on the page.
Use direct, benefit-driven headlines.
Match each ad to keyword intent—commercial, transactional, or informational.
Use the maximum number of extensions available to boost relevance.
One-size-fits-all landing pages kill ROI on Bing, especially for transactional campaigns. Bing users tend to prefer clear, structured experiences with minimal distraction.
Mismatched landing pages reduce Quality Score.
Lower Quality Scores raise CPC.
Conversion rates drop when users don’t instantly see the offer they clicked for.
Create keyword-specific or intent-specific landing pages.
Simplify layouts: strong headlines, tight copy, a single CTA.
Use fast-loading, mobile-responsive pages optimized for clarity.
Bing’s desktop usage is significantly higher than Google’s, yet many advertisers apply the same bid strategy across both platforms.
Desktop often converts better on Bing.
Mobile traffic may be cheaper but lower intent.
Failing to adjust bids gives you a skewed budget distribution.
Check device performance: adjust mobile or desktop bids by ±20–40%.
Separate campaigns by device if performance differs drastically.
Track conversion value, not just conversion volume, by device.
Search term reports are your best defense against wasted spend. Bing requires vigilance because its matching can be more flexible than expected.
Keywords drift into low-intent queries quickly.
Irrelevant terms can quietly consume thousands per month.
Negative keywords and match types lose effectiveness without review.
Audit search terms 2–3 times weekly (daily for large budgets).
Add both broad negatives and phrase/variant negatives.
Move strong search terms into exact-match ad groups.
If you run only one or two ads per ad group, you’re letting Bing optimize with limited data—and usually in the wrong direction.
Bing’s automated optimization needs variation to learn.
Poor-performing ads get stuck longer without rotation.
Ad copy stagnates, reducing CTR and relevance.
Use at least 4–6 ad variations per ad group.
Test different angles: urgency, benefits, features, proof.
Refresh ad copy monthly to prevent “ad fatigue.”
Many advertisers run Bing campaigns 24/7, assuming maximum coverage equals maximum ROI. In reality, ad performance fluctuates by time of day, day of week, and even season.
Your budget is wasted during low-intent periods.
CPC may spike at certain hours without corresponding conversions.
Ignoring timing reduces efficiency and increases CPA.
Analyze hourly and daily performance reports.
Apply bid adjustments to reduce spend during low-performing periods.
Increase bids during peak hours where conversion rates are highest.
Remarketing is one of the most powerful ways to recapture lost conversions, yet many Bing advertisers either underutilize it or set it up incorrectly.
High-intent users who visited your site once are lost without follow-up.
Generic remarketing can annoy users instead of converting them.
Missed opportunities increase overall CPA and reduce LTV (lifetime value).
Segment remarketing audiences by behavior (cart abandoners, repeat visitors, high-value page visitors).
Use dynamic remarketing to show tailored offers.
Layer audience lists with search keywords for higher intent.
Poor or incomplete conversion tracking is a silent ROI killer. Without accurate tracking, all other optimizations are guesswork.
CPC and CPA decisions are based on faulty data.
Keywords or ads that truly perform may be cut prematurely.
Optimizations like bid adjustments, remarketing, and ad rotation become ineffective.
Set up Bing UET (Universal Event Tracking) correctly.
Track micro-conversions (form completions, newsletter sign-ups) alongside macro-conversions.
Regularly audit tracking to ensure all goals fire correctly.
Bing Ads’ competitive landscape differs from Google’s. Ignoring competitor activity can leave you blind to opportunities or threats.
You may overpay for keywords that competitors dominate with better ads.
You might miss gaps where your ads could perform better.
Lack of insight can allow competitors to consistently outperform your campaigns.
Use Auction Insights to monitor competitor share, impression share, and overlap.
Adjust bidding strategies or ad copy to outperform top competitors.
Identify low-competition, high-intent keywords for efficient scaling.
Single-Keyword Ad Groups can help with relevancy and Quality Score, but if implemented poorly, they create management nightmares and reduce ROI.
Too many ad groups increase complexity and errors.
Poorly structured SKAGs can cannibalize performance between similar keywords.
Time-intensive maintenance reduces focus on high-performing campaigns.
Use SKAGs strategically for high-intent, high-volume keywords.
Group closely related keywords to minimize overlap.
Regularly review performance and merge underperforming SKAGs.
Ad extensions are more than cosmetic—they directly impact CTR, Quality Score, and ultimately ROI. Many advertisers fail to leverage Bing’s unique extensions fully.
Lower CTR means higher CPC and less efficient spend.
Missing extensions reduce ad real estate and visibility.
Competitors using all available extensions gain a consistent advantage.
Use Sitelink, Callout, Structured Snippet, Location, and Call extensions wherever relevant.
Monitor performance and adjust extensions based on engagement.
Implement dynamic ad extensions to automate relevance.
Bing’s automated bidding strategies—like Enhanced CPC, Maximize Conversions, or Target CPA—can improve ROI when used correctly. Ignoring them keeps campaigns stuck in manual inefficiency.
Manual bids often underperform due to lack of granular adjustments.
Opportunities for higher conversion volume at lower CPA are missed.
Competitors using automation may outperform without increasing spend.
Start with small campaigns to test automated bidding performance.
Compare automated vs. manual over at least 2–4 weeks.
Gradually scale automation on high-performing campaigns while maintaining oversight.
Even after creating dedicated landing pages, stopping at launch is a mistake. Bing users respond to subtle improvements in UX, copy, and CTA placement.
Conversion rates plateau without ongoing testing.
Traffic may flow efficiently, but revenue remains flat.
Competitors continuously testing can outperform you with minor tweaks.
Run A/B tests on headlines, CTAs, images, and form fields.
Optimize page speed and mobile responsiveness.
Track performance changes and implement winners immediately.
Many advertisers leave poorly performing campaigns running indefinitely, hoping they’ll improve. This is a guaranteed ROI drain.
Wasted ad spend accumulates over weeks or months.
Poor-performing campaigns can distort automated bidding algorithms.
Valuable budget is tied up where it cannot generate strong returns.
Set clear KPIs for CTR, conversion rate, and CPA.
Pause or restructure campaigns consistently underperforming.
Allocate freed-up budget to high-performing ad groups for scaling.
Improving Bing Ads ROI is less about increasing spend and more about eliminating avoidable mistakes. From poor targeting, keyword mismanagement, and weak ad copy to landing page mismatches, conversion tracking errors, and neglecting automated features, every mistake directly chips away at profitability.
By carefully auditing campaigns for these 20 mistakes, implementing Bing-specific strategies, and committing to continuous testing and optimization, advertisers can see measurable ROI improvements without additional budget. Remember, Bing is not just a “smaller Google”; it has its own audience, quirks, and opportunities. Mastering these nuances is the fastest path to converting clicks into revenue efficiently.
If you systematically address these mistakes and track performance diligently, your campaigns will not only stop losing money—they’ll start scaling profitably.
If you’re ready to fix these Bing Ads mistakes and finally maximize your ROI, our professional Bing Ads management service provides a full audit, optimization, and campaign scaling strategy tailored to your business. Start turning clicks into revenue today
Marketing LTB is a full-service marketing agency offering over 50 specialized services across 100+ industries. Our seasoned team leverages data-driven strategies and a full-funnel approach to maximize your ROI and fuel business growth.
Bill Nash is the CMO of Marketing LTB with over a decade of experience, he has driven growth for Fortune 500 companies and startups through data-driven campaigns and advanced marketing technologies. He has written over 400 pieces of content about marketing, covering topics like marketing tips, guides, AI in advertising, advanced PPC strategies, conversion optimization, and others.