For most SA training providers, getting your first 20 Google Ads leads requires a budget of R8,000-R15,000 over 30-45 days, a focused keyword strategy targeting course-specific terms, and a dedicated landing page. Cost per lead typically lands at R400-R750 in this niche. The most common reason training providers fail with Google Ads is sending traffic to their homepage instead of course-specific landing pages.
The training and education industry in South Africa is one of the better fits for Google Ads. Why? Because people who search for "PMP certification Johannesburg" or "SETA-accredited project management training" have very high intent. They're not browsing — they're shopping. They want a course, they want it soon, and they're comparing options.
If you can show up at the right moment with the right offer, you'll convert at much higher rates than most industries. But most SA training providers don't. They run generic campaigns, send traffic to their homepage, and conclude "Google Ads doesn't work for our industry."
It does. They're just doing it wrong. Here's the step-by-step playbook.
Why Training Providers Have an Advantage on Google Ads
Compared to most industries, training has three structural advantages on Google Ads:
- High-intent searches: Someone searching "AWS certification training Cape Town" is much further down the buying journey than someone searching "AWS" generically.
- Specific, long-tail keywords: Course names, certification programmes, and skill-specific terms are typically less competitive than broad industry terms — meaning lower CPCs.
- Clear conversion event: Course enquiries, brochure downloads, or course bookings are well-defined actions that are easy to track and optimise for.
The result: training providers can typically generate qualified leads at R400-R750 each — significantly cheaper than property (R1,000-R3,000) or legal services (R2,000-R5,000+).
Step 1: Pick Your Hero Course
The biggest mistake training providers make is trying to advertise their entire course catalogue from day one. With 20+ courses, your budget gets spread too thin to learn anything.
Pick one course to start. Ideally:
- A course you already sell well organically (so you know it converts)
- A course with high search volume in SA
- A course with a clear target audience you can speak to
- A course where you have testimonials and proof points
Common winning choices: PMP Certification, AWS/Azure cloud certifications, SETA-accredited management programmes, sales training, leadership development, MS Office/Excel courses for corporates.
Step 2: Keyword Research (The Foundation)
Open Google Keyword Planner (free with a Google Ads account). Search for your course name. Build out three keyword groups:
Group 1: Course-Specific Keywords
These are your highest-intent terms. Examples for a project management training provider:
- "PMP certification training"
- "PMP course Johannesburg"
- "PMP exam prep South Africa"
- "project management certification online"
- "PMI training providers"
Group 2: Problem-Aware Keywords
People who know they have a problem but haven't decided on a course yet:
- "how to become a project manager"
- "project management qualifications"
- "best project management course"
- "is PMP worth it"
Group 3: Location-Specific Keywords
Especially powerful in South Africa:
- "[course] Johannesburg / Cape Town / Durban / Pretoria"
- "[course] Sandton / Centurion / Rosebank"
- "online [course] South Africa"
- "[course] near me"
SA-specific qualifiers like "SETA-accredited", "BBBEE-aligned", "skills development", and "B-BBEE" can be goldmines. They're highly intent-driven and signal a specific kind of corporate buyer.
Step 3: Build a Negative Keyword List (Critical)
This is where most SA campaigns hemorrhage money. Without negative keywords, your "PMP training" ads also show for searches like:
- "PMP training jobs" (people looking for jobs, not courses)
- "PMP training salary" (researching, not buying)
- "free PMP training" (won't pay for your course)
- "PMP training pirated download" (you don't want these clicks)
Build your negative keyword list with at least these standard exclusions:
- free, gratis, download, torrent, pirate
- job, jobs, vacancy, salary, career
- cheap (unless you're competing on price)
- review (unless you have strong reviews to capitalise on)
- youtube, video (people looking for free YouTube content)
- wiki, wikipedia (research-only intent)
Step 4: Build a Dedicated Landing Page
This is non-negotiable. If you're sending traffic to your homepage, your campaign will fail regardless of how good your ads are.
The landing page for your hero course should include:
Above the fold:
- Headline that matches your ad copy exactly ("PMP Certification Training in Johannesburg")
- Subheadline with the key benefit ("Pass the PMP exam in 12 weeks — guaranteed")
- Single primary CTA ("Get the Course Brochure" or "Book a Free Consultation")
- Trust indicator (PMI accreditation logo, pass rate statistic, number of students trained)
Below the fold:
- "What you'll learn" — 4-6 specific outcomes
- Course structure (modules, duration, format)
- Who it's for (specific personas)
- Instructor credentials
- Testimonials (3-5 specific, named, with company)
- Pricing (or "Investment" if you prefer)
- FAQ section addressing common objections
- Final CTA
Your enquiry form should ask for 3-4 fields maximum: Name, Email, Phone, and "What's your goal?" (optional). Every field beyond that drops your conversion rate by 4-5%. The goal of the form is to start a conversation — not qualify them. Qualification happens on the first call.
Step 5: Write Your Ads
Google Search Ads use Responsive Search Ads — you provide multiple headlines and descriptions, Google tests combinations. Provide:
- 10-15 headlines (30 characters each)
- 4-6 descriptions (90 characters each)
Headline formulas that work for training providers:
- Course name + location: "PMP Certification Training in JHB"
- Outcome-focused: "Pass Your PMP Exam in 12 Weeks"
- Credibility: "PMI-Accredited Training Provider"
- Pain point: "Stop Failing the PMP Exam"
- Specificity: "97% First-Time Pass Rate"
- Format: "Live Online + Saturday Classes"
- Call to action: "Get Free Course Brochure"
- Audience: "For Project Managers in SA"
Description formulas:
- "SETA-accredited PMP training. Live online + weekend classes. 97% pass rate. Get the brochure."
- "Trained 800+ project managers across SA. Flexible payment plans. Book your free consultation today."
- "Approved by SAQA & PMI. Comprehensive exam prep. Materials included. Limited spots — apply now."
Use ad extensions (sitelinks, callouts, structured snippets) — they increase your click-through rate by 10-30% at no extra cost.
Step 6: Set Up Conversion Tracking (Before You Launch)
Without proper tracking, you cannot optimise. You're flying blind.
The minimum tracking setup:
- Google Tag Manager installed on your site
- Google Analytics 4 connected via GTM
- Conversion events defined: form submission, phone click, brochure download
- Google Ads conversion tracking linked to GA4 events
- Phone call tracking if calls are a primary conversion
This setup costs R3,000-R8,000 once-off if you outsource it. It's the highest-ROI thing you can spend money on before launching ads.
Step 7: Launch With Discipline
Your first campaign should be deliberately narrow:
- Budget: R300-R500/day (R10k-R15k/month)
- Geographic targeting: Specific SA city/province (not all of SA)
- Schedule: Business hours only (8am-6pm) for the first 2 weeks
- Match types: Phrase match and exact match only (no broad match)
- Bidding: Maximise Conversions or Manual CPC (avoid Smart Bidding for first 30 days — there's not enough data yet)
Resist the temptation to "let Google optimise" too early. The algorithm needs 30-50 conversions before it can optimise effectively. Until then, manual control produces better results.
Step 8: The First 30 Days (What to Expect)
Realistic expectations for a training provider with R10k/month budget:
| Week | Expected Results | Focus Area |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 50-100 clicks, 1-3 leads | Identify wasted spend, refine negatives |
| Week 2 | 100-150 clicks, 2-5 leads | A/B test ad copy, refine landing page |
| Week 3 | 150-200 clicks, 5-8 leads | Pause underperforming keywords |
| Week 4 | 200-300 clicks, 8-15 leads | Scale winners, expand to new keywords |
By the end of month one, you should have generated 20+ leads at a cost of R400-R750 per lead. If you're significantly off these numbers (more than 2x worse), the problem is usually one of:
- Landing page not converting (test with Hotjar or Crazy Egg)
- Targeting too broad (location, keywords, match types)
- Ad copy not matching landing page promise
- No follow-up system (leads coming in but going cold)
Step 9: Optimise From Real Data
After 30 days, you have actionable data. The optimisation cycle:
Weekly tasks (1-2 hours):
- Review search terms report — add new negative keywords
- Pause keywords with 0 conversions after 100+ clicks
- Review device and time-of-day performance — adjust bid modifiers
- A/B test a new landing page element (headline, CTA, social proof)
Monthly tasks (3-4 hours):
- Full account audit — check Quality Scores, ad performance, ad extensions
- Refresh ad copy (Google penalises ads that haven't changed in months)
- Add new keyword themes based on what's converting
- Review landing page heatmaps and adjust based on user behaviour
Step 10: Scale What Works
Once you have a campaign producing leads at a profitable cost per lead, scaling is straightforward:
Horizontal scale (more keywords):
Take the keyword themes that are working and expand them. If "PMP training Johannesburg" is converting, add Cape Town, Durban, Pretoria, online variants.
Vertical scale (more budget):
Increase budget by 20-30% per week. Don't double overnight — Google's algorithm needs time to adjust to higher volumes.
New course launch:
Once your first course is profitable, add a second. Don't try to launch all courses at once — add them sequentially as you have budget and capacity.
Common Mistakes That Kill Training Provider Campaigns
- Sending traffic to the homepage: Single biggest mistake. Always use a course-specific landing page.
- Using broad match keywords: Without negative keywords, broad match burns budget on irrelevant searches.
- Vague ad copy: "Quality training programs" doesn't work. "PMP certification with 97% first-time pass rate" does.
- No SETA / accreditation mentions: SA buyers heavily weight accreditation. If you have it, mention it.
- Slow follow-up: The 5-minute rule applies — leads contacted within 5 minutes are 21x more likely to convert.
- No retargeting: Most visitors don't convert first time. Retargeting them costs 1/4 as much as a new click.
- Ignoring search terms: Review the search terms report weekly. You'll find golden negatives and unexpected positive keywords.
Realistic Total Cost for the First 90 Days
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Conversion tracking setup (once-off) | R5,000 |
| Landing page development (once-off) | R8,000 |
| Ad spend (3 months) | R30,000-R45,000 |
| Account management (3 months) | R15,000-R30,000 (if outsourced) |
| Total 90-day investment | R58,000-R88,000 |
Expected output: 60-90 qualified leads, 12-25 enrolments at typical training conversion rates of 20-30%. At an average course value of R8,000-R15,000, that's R96,000-R375,000 in revenue from R58k-R88k investment.
The math works for most SA training providers. The execution is what separates the businesses that scale from those that conclude "Google Ads doesn't work."
Want help building this system end-to-end?
Run the Simplifico Digital Growth Audit to see exactly which parts of your funnel need fixing before you scale Google Ads.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does Google Ads cost for training providers in South Africa?
For SA training providers, expect a minimum budget of R8,000-R15,000/month in ad spend, plus R5,000-R10,000 in management fees. Cost per lead typically lands at R400-R750 for a properly-run campaign.
How long until Google Ads generates leads for my training business?
First clicks within 24-48 hours of launching. First leads usually within the first week. Stable, optimised performance typically reached after 30-45 days. Real ROI assessment requires 60-90 days of data.
Should I run Google Ads for my entire course catalogue?
No, especially not at first. Pick one hero course, get it profitable, then expand. Trying to advertise 10+ courses with a R10k budget spreads spend too thin to optimise anything effectively.
What's the best landing page format for course advertising?
Single-page, course-specific, with: clear headline matching the ad, key benefits, course structure, instructor credentials, 3-5 testimonials, pricing or investment information, FAQ section addressing common objections, and a single 3-4 field enquiry form.
Do I need to be SETA accredited to run Google Ads?
No, but if you are accredited, mention it prominently. SA buyers — especially corporate L&D managers — heavily weight accreditation. SETA, B-BBEE alignment, and SAQA registration are powerful trust signals to include in ad copy and landing pages.