---
title: Low Volume, High CTR Strategy — Quarra Stone
type: article
created: '2026-04-05'
updated: '2026-04-05'
source_docs:
- raw/2025-11-10-quarra-stone-marketing-call-100545892.md
tags:
- google-ads
- quarra-stone
- b2b
- ctr
- keyword-strategy
layer: 2
client_source: null
industry_context: null
transferable: true
---

# Low Volume, High CTR Strategy — Quarra Stone

## Overview

In Quarra Stone's November 2025 marketing review, Google Ads performance revealed a pattern common in niche B2B markets: **very low search volume but unusually high click-through rates**. This creates a strategic decision point — the ads are working well for the people who see them, but not enough people are searching to generate meaningful lead volume.

This article captures the analysis and decision framework discussed, as a reference for similar B2B clients with highly specialized service offerings.

---

## Performance Snapshot (Last 30 Days)

| Campaign | Clicks | CTR | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fine Arts | 13 (highest) | Below 5% avg | Most impressions of any campaign |
| Digital Fabrication | Very low | **12.3%** | More than 2× the ~5% industry average |
| Retargeting | 0 | — | No cost; passive capture only |

**Key tension:** The Digital Fabrication campaign has an exceptional CTR — more than double the ~5% industry benchmark — but the absolute click volume is negligible because so few people are searching for these niche terms in the first place.

---

## Root Cause: Niche B2B Search Behavior

The campaigns were intentionally scoped to highly specific keywords (e.g., "digital fabrication stone," "fine arts stone work") to attract qualified leads. The problem is structural:

- **B2B buyers in specialized trades rarely use Google to discover vendors.** They rely on referrals, trade networks, and direct outreach.
- **Search volume for hyper-specific stone fabrication terms is inherently low.** There simply aren't many people searching for exactly what Quarra does.
- The high CTR confirms the *ad creative and targeting are sound* — the limiting factor is audience size, not ad quality.

> *"There's just not a ton of people searching for specifically what you guys do... B2B Google Ads are kind of difficult in that sense because most of the time as a business owner, you're not going to be searching for those things."*
> — Karly Oykhman (AAG), Nov 2025 review

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## Decision Framework: Pause vs. Expand

Two options were presented to the client:

### Option A — Pause Campaigns
- Stop spend entirely.
- Rationale: low ROI on time and budget given minimal click volume.
- Risk: lose the passive capture that does occur at low cost.

### Option B — Expand Keywords (Broader Targeting)
- Add broader, less-specific keywords to increase impression volume.
- Rework landing pages to convert a wider (less pre-qualified) audience.
- Pair with e-guides or lead magnets to improve conversion rate.
- Risk: attracts less-qualified traffic; requires more landing page investment.

**AAG's recommendation** leaned toward keeping campaigns running given the low cost, while expanding keywords if the client wants to meaningfully grow volume. The retargeting campaign was noted as essentially free insurance — no cost unless triggered.

**Status as of Nov 2025:** Decision deferred to client (lldurham). See [[clients/quarra-stone/_index]] for follow-up.

---

## Strategic Context

AAG also noted that **email marketing may be a more effective lead generation channel** for Quarra given the B2B nature of the business. Google Ads can complement but likely shouldn't be the primary acquisition lever for a company selling to architects, developers, and institutional clients.

The high CTR data is still valuable: it validates that the ad copy and keyword intent alignment are strong. If Quarra ever runs a campaign targeting a broader audience (e.g., "natural stone fabrication" or "architectural stonework"), the creative approach should be preserved.

---

## Related

- [[clients/quarra-stone/_index]]
- [[meetings/2025-11-10-quarra-stone-marketing-review]]
- [[knowledge/seo/quarra-branded-vs-nonbranded-traffic]]