A copy-paste PPC specialist job description built from real hiring rounds. Covers responsibilities, qualifications, salary benchmarks, and interview screening criteria for Google Ads, Meta Ads, and programmatic roles.
Last updated: March 2026 · 10 min read
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[Company Name] is hiring a PPC Specialist to own and optimize paid search and paid social campaigns across Google Ads, Microsoft Ads, and [Meta Ads / LinkedIn Ads / programmatic platforms]. You’ll report to the [Marketing Manager / Director of Growth / Head of Performance Marketing] and work closely with creative, analytics, and content teams. This is a [full-time / contract] position based in [location / remote].
1. Build, launch, and manage PPC campaigns across Google Ads (Search, Shopping, Display, YouTube) and [Meta Ads / Microsoft Ads] 2. Conduct keyword research using tools like SEMrush, Google Keyword Planner, or SpyFu to identify high-intent, cost-efficient keywords 3. Write and test ad copy variations (headlines, descriptions, sitelinks, callouts) with structured A/B testing 4. Manage daily and monthly budgets ranging from [$X to $Y], allocating spend based on ROAS and CPA targets 5. Monitor campaign performance daily. Adjust bids, audiences, placements, and budgets based on data 6. Build and maintain negative keyword lists to eliminate wasted spend 7. Collaborate with the design team on landing page tests to improve conversion rates 8. Set up and maintain conversion tracking via Google Tag Manager, GA4, and platform-native pixels 9. Deliver weekly and monthly performance reports with actionable recommendations 10. Stay current on platform updates, including Google’s AI Max for Search campaigns and Performance Max improvements
• 2+ years managing PPC campaigns with a combined monthly budget of at least $10,000 • Google Ads certification (Search and/or Shopping) • Proficiency in Google Ads Editor, Google Analytics 4, and Google Tag Manager • Experience with bid strategies: manual CPC, target CPA, target ROAS, and maximize conversions • Strong Excel or Google Sheets skills (pivot tables, VLOOKUP, data visualization) • Ability to write clear, concise ad copy that follows platform character limits • Understanding of landing page best practices and conversion rate optimization fundamentals
• Experience with Microsoft Ads, LinkedIn Ads, or programmatic platforms (DV360, The Trade Desk) • Familiarity with Google Ads scripts or automated rules for bid management • Experience managing e-commerce campaigns with product feed optimization • Knowledge of attribution models beyond last-click (data-driven, linear, time-decay) • Experience with Looker Studio (formerly Data Studio) for custom dashboards • Exposure to AI-powered campaign types like Performance Max and AI Max for Search
Salary benchmarks from Glassdoor, PayScale, ZipRecruiter, and Indeed, updated for 2026.
| Experience Level | Salary Range (USD) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Entry-Level (0-1 years) | $40,000 – $55,000 | PayScale, 2026 |
| Mid-Level (2-4 years) | $55,000 – $75,000 | ZipRecruiter, 2026 |
| Senior (5-8 years) | $75,000 – $110,000 | Glassdoor, 2026 |
| Manager / Lead (8+ years) | $100,000 – $158,000 | Glassdoor, 2026 |
Hiring managers, recruiters, and founders building performance marketing teams.
You’re hiring your first (or second) PPC hire. Use this template to set clear expectations and attract candidates who can manage $10K-$500K monthly budgets independently.
Agency PPC roles require multi-account management skills. Customize the responsibilities section to emphasize client communication, reporting cadence, and platform breadth.
If you’re sourcing PPC talent but don’t have deep paid media expertise, this template gives you the right language. The screening criteria section helps you evaluate candidates even without PPC knowledge.
Separate the must-haves from the nice-to-haves. Focus your screening on these 6 areas.
| Skill Area | What to Test | How to Test |
|---|---|---|
| Campaign Structure | Can they build a logical account structure (campaigns, ad groups, keyword themes)? | Give a sample product catalog. Ask them to outline the campaign structure. |
| Keyword Research | Do they understand match types, negative keywords, and search intent? | Provide 20 search terms. Ask them to sort by intent and recommend match types. |
| Bid Management | Can they explain when to use manual CPC vs. target CPA vs. maximize conversions? | Scenario-based interview question with budget constraints. |
| Ad Copy | Can they write ads within character limits that differentiate from competitors? | Live exercise: write 3 responsive search ad variations for a given product. |
| Analytics | Can they set up conversion tracking and interpret GA4 data? | Walk through a GA4 report and ask them to identify the problem. |
| Budget Management | Can they allocate spend across campaigns to hit a blended CPA target? | Give them last month’s data across 5 campaigns. Ask for reallocation recommendations. |
At ScaleGrowth.Digital, we’ve built PPC management programs for brands spending $20K to $500K per month. The common thread across every successful hire we’ve seen: the specialist understood the business model, not just the platform. A PPC specialist for an e-commerce brand needs different instincts than one running lead gen for B2B SaaS. When writing your job description, be specific about your industry, your budget range, and the platforms that matter most. Generic descriptions attract generic candidates. A JD that says “manage Google Ads campaigns with a $50K monthly budget for a D2C supplement brand” will outperform “manage PPC campaigns” every time. Google introduced AI Max for Search campaigns in late 2025, and Performance Max continues to expand its automation scope in 2026. Your job description should reflect this reality: the modern PPC specialist needs to understand when to let automation run and when to override it. That’s a judgment call that separates a $60K hire from a $100K hire.“The best PPC specialists I’ve hired weren’t the ones with the most certifications. They were the ones who could open a Search Terms report, spot the waste in 5 minutes, and build the negative keyword list before I finished my coffee. Test for pattern recognition and speed, not credentials.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Use this during interviews or onboarding. Give candidates a sample account and this checklist to see how they diagnose problems. Get Checklist →
Set ROAS targets before you hire. This calculator helps you determine what return you need from PPC to justify the specialist’s salary. Use Calculator →
60+ PPC terms defined. Share with your HR team so they can evaluate candidates without needing a crash course in paid media. View Glossary →
A PPC specialist is an individual contributor who executes campaigns: keyword research, ad copy, bid adjustments, and reporting. A PPC manager oversees strategy, manages a team of specialists, owns the budget allocation across campaigns, and reports to senior leadership. Specialists typically have 1-4 years of experience; managers have 5+ years and people management responsibilities.
Google Ads Search certification is the baseline. Google Ads Shopping and Display certifications add value for e-commerce and awareness-stage campaigns. Meta Blueprint certification matters if the role includes Facebook and Instagram ads. Microsoft Advertising certification is relevant for B2B roles where Bing has meaningful market share. Certifications prove foundational knowledge, but practical portfolio work and campaign results matter more in hiring decisions.
In the United States, a mid-level PPC specialist (2-4 years of experience) earns $55,000-$75,000 per year. Senior specialists with 5+ years and experience managing budgets over $100K per month earn $75,000-$110,000. Fully loaded cost (salary + benefits + tools + training) is typically 1.3x the base salary. Agency PPC specialists tend to earn 10-15% less in base salary than in-house roles.
Hire in-house when your monthly ad spend exceeds $30,000 and you need daily optimization, fast creative iteration, and deep product knowledge. Outsource to an agency when your spend is under $30,000, you need multi-platform expertise without hiring three specialists, or you’re testing PPC as a channel before committing to a full-time hire. Many companies start with an agency, then bring the role in-house once the channel proves profitable.
At minimum: Google Ads, Google Ads Editor, Google Analytics 4, Google Tag Manager, and Google Keyword Planner (all free). Most teams also use SEMrush or SpyFu for competitive research ($120-$250/month), Optmyzr or Adalysis for optimization automation ($200-$500/month), and Looker Studio for reporting (free). Budget $300-$700/month for PPC tools per specialist on top of salary.
Our PPC practice manages $2M+ in annual ad spend across Google Ads, Meta, and LinkedIn. Get performance-grade PPC management while you build your team. Talk to Our PPC Team →