PPC for Hospitals: Multi-Department Campaign Architecture
Hospital Google Ads accounts require a fundamentally different structure than single-practice campaigns. Here is the campaign architecture that maximizes ROI across departments while maintaining budget control.
Co-Founder & CTO, Branding Pioneers

What You'll Learn
- 1Benchmarks for your specialty — so you know if your numbers are good or falling behind
- 2The patient psychology behind Ppc for hospitals: multi Department campaign architecture — why healthcare buyers behave differently
- 3How to build a Ppc for hospitals: multi Department campaign architecture strategy that gets stronger over time
- 4Budget allocation frameworks used by the fastest-growing healthcare practices
- 5Compliance guardrails you need to know before launching any Ppc for hospitals: multi Department campaign architecture campaign
- 6How to evaluate and choose the right partner or tool for Ppc for hospitals: multi Department campaign architecture
Why Hospital PPC Fails With a Flat Campaign Structure
When hospitals first launch Google Ads, the most common mistake is creating one or two campaigns that cover every department. Cardiology, orthopedics, oncology, maternity, and emergency services all share a single budget and compete for the same daily spend.
The result is predictable: whichever department has the highest click volume (usually general queries and emergency services) consumes the budget before your high-value service lines ever get a chance. Meanwhile, a click for "hospital near me" costs 15 rupees and generates a low-value walk-in, while a click for "knee replacement hospital in Delhi" costs 85 rupees but generates a patient worth 3 to 5 lakhs in lifetime revenue. Without structural separation, you cannot make these trade-offs intentionally.
The Department-Level Campaign Framework
The architecture that works for hospitals mirrors their organizational structure: one campaign per major department or service line. At minimum, create separate campaigns for each department that has its own P&L or revenue target.
A typical 200-bed hospital might have eight to twelve campaigns: cardiology, orthopedics, oncology, neurology, maternity/gynecology, gastroenterology, emergency/urgent care, diagnostics, general surgery, and preventive health/check-ups. Each campaign gets its own daily budget, its own keyword set, its own landing pages, and its own conversion tracking.
This structure gives you granular control. If your orthopedics department has capacity for 20 more joint replacements this quarter, you can increase that campaign's budget without affecting other departments. If oncology is at full capacity, you can pause that campaign immediately.
Keyword Architecture by Department
Each department campaign should have three ad groups organized by intent level:
**High intent (bottom of funnel):** Keywords that signal a patient ready to book. "Knee replacement surgery in Delhi," "best cardiologist appointment," "brain tumor treatment hospital." These convert at 8 to 15 percent and justify higher bids.
**Medium intent (middle of funnel):** Keywords from patients researching but not yet decided. "Knee replacement cost," "heart bypass surgery recovery time," "chemotherapy side effects." These convert at 2 to 5 percent and should have moderate bids.
**Low intent (top of funnel):** Symptom and condition searches. "Chest pain causes," "knee pain when climbing stairs," "persistent headache." These convert at 0.5 to 2 percent. Only invest here if your high-intent campaigns are already maximized and you have budget headroom.
Separate ad groups allow different bid strategies and ad copy for each intent level. A patient searching "knee replacement hospital" needs a different ad than one searching "knee pain causes."
Budget Allocation Framework
Allocate budget based on a combination of patient lifetime value, department capacity, and current conversion data. A practical formula: multiply the average patient value for each department by the current conversion rate by the available capacity. This gives you a weighted score that guides budget distribution.
In practice, surgical specialties (orthopedics, cardiology, oncology) typically receive 50 to 60 percent of total hospital PPC budget because patient values are 10 to 50 times higher than for general consultations. Diagnostics and health check-ups receive 10 to 15 percent — lower patient value, but high volume and a pathway to upselling specialist consultations.
Review and reallocate budget monthly. Department capacity changes seasonally, and conversion rates shift as you optimize landing pages and ad copy.
Remarketing Architecture for Hospitals
Hospital remarketing requires segmentation that mirrors your campaign structure. Create separate remarketing audiences for visitors to each department's pages. A visitor who browsed your cardiology services page should see cardiology-specific remarketing ads, not generic hospital branding.
Build a three-stage remarketing sequence for each department: days 1 to 7 after visit, serve educational content ads (a video about what to expect during a cardiac consultation); days 8 to 14, serve social proof ads (patient testimonials, success rates); days 15 to 30, serve urgency-oriented ads (limited appointment availability, seasonal health reminders).
This segmented remarketing approach typically converts at 3 to 5 times the rate of generic hospital remarketing at 40 percent lower cost per conversion.
Conversion Tracking by Department
Implement department-specific conversion tracking from day one. Each department should track: phone calls from ads (with call tracking numbers unique to each campaign), form submissions from department-specific landing pages, appointment bookings through your online scheduling system, and WhatsApp click-to-chat initiations.
Assign different conversion values to different departments. A cardiology consultation booking should have a higher conversion value than a general health checkup, because it leads to higher downstream revenue. This value-based approach allows Google's smart bidding algorithms to optimize for revenue rather than just conversion volume.
Hospitals that implement department-level conversion values see 30 to 50 percent improvements in return on ad spend within 60 days compared to flat conversion tracking.
Cross-Department Opportunities
Certain searches indicate need across multiple departments. "Full body checkup" touches diagnostics, cardiology, and preventive health. "Post-accident care" spans orthopedics, neurology, and emergency services.
Create cross-department campaigns for these high-value, multi-specialty queries. The landing page should present the hospital's comprehensive capability, with clear pathways to each relevant department. These campaigns often have the highest conversion rates because they showcase the unique advantage hospitals have over single-specialty practices.
Reporting and Stakeholder Management
Hospital administrators need department-level reporting that connects ad spend to patient volume and revenue. Build a monthly dashboard showing: spend per department, leads per department, cost per lead per department, estimated patient value per department, and blended return on ad spend.
This transparency builds internal support for PPC investment and helps department heads understand the value their marketing budget delivers. Hospitals that share department-level performance data retain marketing budget at 2 to 3 times the rate of those that report only aggregate metrics.
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