What should a weekly ad monitoring routine include?

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Fifteen minutes every Tuesday beats three hours of panic on a Thursday when someone notices conversions flatlined four days ago. That is the math behind a weekly ad monitoring routine. Small, scheduled reviews keep protection active without turning you into a full-time auditor.

You do not need to rebuild reports from scratch each week. You need the same six checks, the same order, and clear actions when a number looks off. Here is what belongs in the routine and how long each step should take.

What should a weekly ad monitoring routine include?

A weekly ad monitoring routine includes spend pacing, click-to-session match, conversion quality on paid pages, alert review, cap status, and a short action log. Together they answer whether ads are safe to keep running or need a same-day fix.

Run the routine on the same weekday every week. Consistency matters more than perfection. Skip a week and small problems become the new normal.

The six weekly checks

1. Spend versus caps

Compare seven-day spend to your daily and campaign caps. Flag any test campaign above eighty percent of its limit midweek.

2. Clicks versus sessions

Plot ad clicks against tagged site sessions for the same period. A gap wider than ten percent for two days in a row deserves investigation before you raise budget.

3. Paid landing page health

Check bounce rate and primary conversion rate on pages that receive paid traffic only. A spike in bounce often means message mismatch or a broken form, not bad creative alone.

4. Alert and fraud log

Review automated alerts and fraud flags from the past seven days. Empty logs are fine when spend was normal. Silent logs during high spend are not.

5. Active exclusions

Confirm exclusion lists still apply to live campaigns. New ad sets sometimes launch without inherited blocks.

6. Action log update

Record what you paused, fixed, or escalated. Future you will need that paper trail when patterns repeat.

Pull alert setup guidance from alerts and automated monitoring and panel layout from building an ad protection dashboard so all six checks live on one screen.

When a weekly check fails

Do not wait for the monthly audit. Pause or cap the affected campaign the same day. Add a placement or audience block if the signal points to a source. Log the incident so your ad protection processes doc captures what triggered the fix.

Deep pattern analysis belongs in the monthly pass covered in what a monthly ad audit routine includes. Weekly work is triage. Monthly work is diagnosis.

Frequently asked questions

How long should a weekly ad review take?

Should I run weekly checks on paused campaigns?

What is the most important weekly metric?

Can one person handle the weekly routine for multiple accounts?

Where should I track sessions for the weekly comparison?

What if I miss a week during a busy period?

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