u/Commercial_Morning79

▲ 19 r/PPC

Google released its 2025 U.S. Economic Impact Report this week, which is a yearly report that attempts to quantify the benefit the company provides to the US economy. Google claims they generated $947 billion in economic activity for American businesses, up 11% from last year.

The report's core claim is that for every $1 a business spends on Google Ads, it gets $8 in profit back. 

Google came up with the 8x multiplier using two models created by economists in 2009. One that assume there is a $2 profit for every $1 of ad spend, and another assuming businesses get 5 organic clicks for every paid click. Together, that gets you to 8x.

Those numbers sound aggressive on their face, before accounting for the drop in click-through rates resulting from AI overviews or the consistent rise in CPCs broadly observed over the last few years.

There's also zero mention of the antitrust rulings, where Google was adjudicated a monopolist and two judges found that they charged supracompetitive prices for search and display ads. They're now being sued by many large publishers, and there are thousands of advertisers participating in a mass arbitration to recoup the overcharges.

All told, 8x feels like a wildly inflated figure built on economic models from 15+ years ago, applied to a market two federal courts have now ruled isn't competitive in the first place.

Curious what others think, especially anyone who's been managing large budgets since 2009. 

Here's a solid summary of the report from PPC Land:

https://ppc.land/googles-2025-u-s-economic-impact-report-947-billion-and-what-it-hides/

u/Commercial_Morning79 — 16 days ago

I've been running ads for my site for several years and I've spent quite a bit on Google. I just started seeing advertising and news for this Google case. Apparently Google owes money to advertisers because they were found guilty in court cases of being a monopoly.  Has anyone here actually looked into this or started the process?

It seems like it's probably legit but I wasn't sure if it's for smaller spenders or is this really only relevant if you're spending millions.

Would appreciate hearing from anyone who's further along in figuring this out than I am.

This was one of the articles I found on it: https://www.adexchanger.com/antitrust/for-google-advertisers-who-overpaid-the-monopoly-dont-hate-arbitrate/

u/Commercial_Morning79 — 22 days ago

I've been running ads for my site for several years and I've spent quite a bit on Google. I just started seeing advertising and news for this Google case. Apparently Google owes money to advertisers because they were found guilty in court cases of being a monopoly.  Has anyone here actually looked into this or started the process?

It seems like it's probably legit but I wasn't sure if it's for smaller spenders or is this really only relevant if you're spending millions.

Would appreciate hearing from anyone who's further along in figuring this out than I am.

reddit.com
u/Commercial_Morning79 — 24 days ago

I've been running ads for my site for several years and I've spent quite a bit on Google. I just started seeing advertising and news for this Google case. Apparently Google owes money to advertisers because they were found guilty in court cases of being a monopoly.  Has anyone here actually looked into this or started the process?

It seems like it's probably legit but I wasn't sure if it's for smaller spenders or is this really only relevant if you're spending millions.

Would appreciate hearing from anyone who's further along in figuring this out than I am.

reddit.com
u/Commercial_Morning79 — 25 days ago