The Channels Do Different Jobs
Google captures demand after the homeowner can name the project. They search kitchen remodeler near me, bathroom renovation cost, shower replacement, cabinet design, or kitchen addition because the need has become clear enough to shop.
Meta can reach the buyer earlier. They are saving kitchens, noticing a dated primary bath, watching tile and layout videos, or realizing their kitchen will not work for the way they host. The category may not be fully named yet, but the desire is forming.
That means the channels should not be judged by lead cost alone. One catches active comparison. The other can build familiarity before the buyer enters the most competitive search auction.
Cheap Leads Can Still Be Expensive
A low-cost Meta lead can be useful if the follow-up path matches where the homeowner is in the decision. It can also be expensive if it produces quick form fills from people who have no budget, no timeline, or no fit for design-led work.
A higher-cost Google lead can be profitable when it becomes a serious consultation for a kitchen, bath, or main-floor remodel. The useful metric isn't cost per lead. It's cost per qualified consultation, cost per proposal, and revenue per lead by source.
Kitchen and bath remodelers get into trouble when they let the ad platform with the cheapest lead define success. The CRM and signed-job data have to stay attached long enough to show which source produced real work.
Kitchen and Bath Demand Often Starts Before Search
A homeowner may spend months saving cabinet colors, tile ideas, shower niches, lighting plans, appliance layouts, and before-and-after videos before contacting anyone. That behavior matters because preference forms before the inquiry.
Meta creative works best when it respects that stage. Show real rooms, explain one constraint, show the design decision, and connect the result to how the homeowner lives. A generic discount usually attracts a different buyer than a thoughtful project story.
The goal is to help the right homeowner recognize the project and start trusting your process before they start comparing three remodelers on Google.
The Landing Page Has to Continue the Conversation
A Meta ad about a small kitchen layout should not land on a generic homepage. A Google ad about a primary bath remodel should not land on a page that never explains design, selections, timeline, dust, or what happens at the first consultation.
Kitchen and bath projects carry a lot of hidden anxiety. The homeowner is wondering about budget, disruption, selections, permits, timeline, communication, and whether the finished space will feel worth the mess.
A connected path lets the ad, page, form, CRM, and follow-up carry the same context. That context is how the team knows whether the lead came from inspiration, urgent search, retargeting, referral, or a project page.
Compare Through Signed Work
Compare Meta and Google through the same funnel: visits, calls, forms, consults, design agreements, proposals, signed jobs, average project value, gross profit, and revenue per lead.
You may find Google produces fewer but more urgent consults. You may find Meta creates earlier awareness that later closes through branded search. You may find retargeting keeps the right buyer warm through a long decision.
Any of those answers can be useful. The point is to know what each channel is responsible for so the next dollar follows revenue, not the cheapest form fill.
Pick the Channel by the Buyer Stage
Use Meta when the buyer needs inspiration, education, retargeting, or proof before search. Use Google when the buyer has named the need and is comparing remodelers now. Use the website and CRM to preserve what happened after the click.
If your kitchen and bath campaigns are judged only by lead cost, the strongest source may get punished and the weakest source may get rewarded.
If you want to see what happens after the lead comes in, book an intro call. We will look at the ad, page, consultation path, CRM, and signed-job data together.