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When An Injury Practice Area Needs Its Own Google Ads Campaign

May 15, 2026 By Jason Rothman Leave a Comment

One question that comes up a lot in Google Ads accounts is when something deserves its own campaign.

Sometimes the answer is obvious. If you have a new location, that usually deserves its own campaign. If you want to run a totally different schedule, that can require a separate campaign. If you want to target a different geography, that can also call for a separate campaign. But there’s another reason to break something out that I think business owners and attorneys should understand: sometimes a smaller practice area needs its own campaign because it is getting buried inside a larger campaign.

This comes up all the time in injury law advertising.

In a typical injury lawyer Google Ads account, the big searches are going to be things like injury lawyer, accident lawyer, personal injury attorney, and near me or geography searches like car accident lawyer dallas, injury attorney new york city, accident lawyer near me, and similar terms. Those are the big injury searches. They have a lot of volume, they usually convert well when the account is set up correctly, and they can spend a lot of money.

Then you have smaller case-type searches like motorcycle accidents, truck wrecks, slip and falls, dog bites, pedestrian accidents, rideshare accidents, and other more specific injury searches. Those searches can be great. Sometimes they can be extremely valuable. But they usually do not have the same volume as the big core injury and accident lawyer searches.

That difference in volume matters a lot when you are building campaigns.

If you put motorcycle accident keywords, truck wreck keywords, slip and fall keywords, and dog bite keywords inside the same campaign as the big injury lawyer and accident lawyer keywords, you may technically be advertising for all of those case types. They may all be in the account. The keywords may be live. The ads may be eligible. But that does not mean those smaller case-type ad groups are going to get much traffic.

The big searches can eat the budget.

That is not a bad thing by itself. If the main injury lawyer and accident lawyer searches are producing good leads and signed cases at a profitable cost per case, then you do not want to get too cute and start messing with a working machine. A lot of Google Ads success comes down to doing the obvious things well: show up on the right searches, track the leads correctly, answer the phone, sign the cases, and keep the cost per case below the value of the case.

But there is a difference between having a case type included in the account and actively pushing that case type.

If a law firm says, “We want more motorcycle accident cases,” or “We want to push truck wrecks harder,” or “Dog bites are profitable for us and we want more of them,” then that is a different conversation. At that point, having those keywords sitting inside a larger injury campaign may not be enough. You may need to break that case type into its own campaign so it has its own budget and its own lane.

That is one of the cleanest reasons to create a new campaign.

Not because you want the account to look more complicated. Not because every single practice area needs its own little campaign from day one. And definitely not because some agency wants to make the account structure look impressive in a report. The reason to break something out is simple: you want more control over where the money goes.

Inside one campaign, the budget is shared. Google is going to find volume where the volume exists. If accident lawyer searches are getting clicks and conversions every day, and dog bite searches only have a fraction of the search volume, the dog bite ad group can easily sit there and get a small amount of traffic. It might gather some data. It might get a few leads. It might prove there is opportunity. But it probably will not be the main thing driving spend.

When you move a case type into its own campaign, now you can force the issue. You can give motorcycle accidents their own budget. You can give truck wrecks their own budget. You can decide how aggressive you want to be. You can judge performance based on that case type instead of having it buried inside a much larger campaign.

That does not magically create search volume. This is important. There are only so many truck wreck searches in a market each month. A separate campaign does not invent demand out of thin air. But it does let you capture more of the available demand and make sure that case type is not being starved by the larger, higher-volume searches.

There is also a practical data benefit. When a smaller case type has its own campaign, the performance is easier to read. You can see the spend, leads, cost per lead, search terms, phone calls, form submissions, and signed cases more clearly. You are not trying to dig through a giant blended campaign and guess what is really happening. You can look at the campaign and say, “Are truck wrecks working for us or not?”

That is the kind of clarity you want in injury law Google Ads.

But I would not break everything out automatically. That is the mistake on the other side. Some accounts are too consolidated and the smaller case types never get room to breathe. Other accounts are too fragmented and there are twenty tiny campaigns with barely any data. Neither extreme is ideal. The structure should serve the business goal.

If the goal is to run a strong overall injury campaign and get as many qualified leads as possible at the right cost per case, then the main injury and accident lawyer campaigns may do most of the work. That is fine. But if the firm has a specific business reason to push motorcycle accidents, truck wrecks, slip and falls, or dog bites, then breaking that practice area into its own campaign can make a lot of sense.

The key question is not, “Can we advertise for this case type?”

Of course you can.

The better question is, “Do we want this case type to get its own budget?”

That is the real campaign structure question. If the answer is yes, then it may deserve its own campaign. If the answer is no, then it may be fine sitting inside the larger injury campaign, gathering data and picking up some traffic when the opportunity is there.

This is where Google Ads management is less about fancy settings and more about common sense. Big searches get big volume. Smaller searches get smaller volume. Shared budgets naturally favor the bigger opportunities. And when a smaller opportunity matters enough to the business, you sometimes have to pull it out and give it its own budget.

That is not complicated.

But it is important.

And in injury law, where one good case can be worth a lot of money, getting this structure right can make a real difference to your monthly results.

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About Jason Rothman

President of Rothman PPC. Co-host of the Paid Search Podcast.

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