A broken landing page form silently destroyed qualified leads for weeks while campaigns ran perfectly. Here's how to catch what Danny Gavin's agency missed.
Every PPC professional has a near-death experience story. For Danny Gavin, founder of Optidge, it wasn't an algorithm change or a budget blowout. It was worse: his agency spent one to two months running profitable-looking campaigns that generated zero actual leads.
The reason? A broken form on the landing page. Not broken in a visible way. Broken silently. Prospects clicked through from ads, landed on the page, filled out the form, and it went nowhere. The campaign metrics looked flawless. Conversion tags fired. The client saw zero leads arrive.
The reason no one spotted it? Because PPC metrics don't measure lead quality or delivery. They measure clicks, landing page visits, and conversion tags. When a conversion tag fires, Google counts it as a conversion. The form validation happens on the front end, the submission appears to work, but the backend fails silently.
Meanwhile, the campaigns kept running. The client kept seeing impressive traffic reports. The agency kept optimizing bids based on inflated conversion data. Everyone believed the funnel was working.
If you run PPC campaigns, your conversion tracking is only half the story. You need a second system that confirms leads actually reach the client.
Your PPC dashboard should never be your only source of truth. Create a separate process that tracks leads all the way through delivery.
The worst part of Danny Gavin's story is how preventable it was. A single form test per week would have caught the issue in days, not months. Instead, months of leads disappeared, and everyone blamed the campaign strategy.
For one to two months, the campaigns continued delivering qualified prospects while the client believed nothing was working.Search Engine Land, Danny Gavin story
If your form is silently failing to submit or send data, your landing page traffic and click metrics still look normal in Google Ads. You see conversions, the client doesn't receive leads, and weeks pass before anyone connects the dots.
Test submissions yourself regularly, check your email inbox and CRM for confirmations, and compare PPC conversion counts to actual leads your client received. A gap means something is broken in the chain.
Check form fields, email delivery, integrations between your form tool and the client's CRM, spam filters, and double-opt-in workflows. A single broken link in any step kills the whole conversion.
According to the story behind this brief, one to two months. Campaigns kept running and clicking, but zero qualified prospects reached the client because the form itself was broken.