Every business owner I work with asks the same thing: "Can you get me to the top of Google?" The honest answer is yes — but the path there surprises most people. The advertiser in the number-one spot is rarely the one paying the most. They're the one Google trusts the most.

Ad Rank, explained simply

Google decides your position using a formula called Ad Rank: roughly, your maximum bid multiplied by your Quality Score, plus the expected impact of your ad extensions. Quality Score is Google's 1–10 rating of how relevant and useful your ad is. A competitor with a Quality Score of 9 can outrank you while bidding 40% less than you do. That's the lever almost nobody pulls.

The three inputs to Quality Score

  • Expected click-through rate — does your ad get clicked when shown?
  • Ad relevance — does your ad copy match what the person searched?
  • Landing page experience — is the page fast, relevant, and easy to act on?

Notice that two of the three have nothing to do with money. They're about relevance. This is why a focused campaign from a small Thai SME can beat a sloppy campaign from a big spender.

A practical checklist

  • Group keywords tightly — one theme per ad group, not 200 keywords in a bucket.
  • Write ad copy that repeats the searcher's exact phrase.
  • Send clicks to a dedicated landing page, never your homepage.
  • Add every relevant extension: sitelinks, callouts, call buttons.
  • Prune negative keywords weekly so you stop paying for junk clicks.
Position one with a great Quality Score often costs less per click than position four with a poor one. Relevance is the cheapest bid multiplier you have.

If you set up tight ad groups, matching copy, and fast landing pages, the Top 3 stops being a bidding war and becomes a relevance game — one you can win on a modest budget.