If you’ve seen a subject line like this in your inbox lately — “Gain up to 100% more conversions: competition changes for your account” — you’ve met Google Ads’ newest feature: forecasting emails.

These emails claim to highlight performance opportunities for your top campaigns — things like “limited budgets” or “auction changes” and suggest ways to “maximize conversions.” Sounds great, right?

Well, not so fast… 

These forecasts are basically Google’s auto-apply recommendations in disguise — just repackaged and emailed directly to you (and, in many cases, to your clients).

They’re designed to sound like personalized insights, but the goal is familiar: encourage higher budgets and broader targeting to get you spending more in competitive auctions.

It’s not that the data is wrong. It’s just presented without full context, and for legal campaigns, that context matters.

Why It’s Risky for Legal Advertisers

If a law firm client sees an email straight from Google promising “100% more conversions,” they might assume it’s a must-do. But following these suggestions blindly can lead to higher costs with little actual gain.

These forecasts blur the line between helpful insight and subtle upsell — and when your clients receive them, it can easily create confusion or pressure to make unnecessary changes.

Our take: We’re not saying ignore them — just don’t treat them as gospel.

  • Review the data yourself
  • Talk to your clients before Google’s emails do
  • Stay in control of optimizations and spend decisions

Because while Google’s forecasting emails sound friendly, their real goal isn’t to protect your budget. It’s to grow theirs.

We’re seeing a new feature inside Google AI Mode: a dropdown that lets users choose between “Fast” and “Pro.” At first glance, it looks simple- a speed or depth preference for how AI-generated answers are delivered. But strategically, it says a lot about where Google is heading.

A recent Local Services Ads (LSA) dispute highlights an issue that many advertisers worry about but rarely see confirmed: a law firm being charged for a call from an existing client.

What we’re seeing inside high-spend injury lawyer campaigns right now is starting to feel less like incremental change and more like system-wide breakdown of signal quality inside search. At a certain point, it stops looking like optimization and starts looking like monetization at any cost.

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