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Whether the SEO and Google Adwords specialists agree, not all B2B companies can afford to hire someone dedicated to their Adwords campaigns. And with many marketing departments getting smaller, the person in charge of the campaign most likely monitors it part time.
But developing Adwords campaigns are definitely not for the faint of heart. Changes have occurred that need to be understood so that your ad dollars are not wasted. And it more important than ever to monitor, track, measure and adjust your campaign so that you can maximize your campaign's effectiveness.
In the past few days, I've seen a number of posts regarding some of these changes. This post is part one in a four part post that discusses Google Adwords features that you need to understand to avoid issues with your campaigns. These posts will include:
- Extended Broad Match
- Automatic Matching
- Landing page load times and quality score
- Display URL policy changes
Extended Broad Match
Keyword matching options within Google Adwords includes exact, phrase and broad. Exact keyword matching is just that - enter [social media marketing] and your ad will only display when someone searches for that phrase exactly. Phrase keyword matching will display your ad when the phrase is used within the search. So "social media marketing" would display when someone searches for "using social media to market your business".
Originally, broad match was a way to ensure your ad displayed on any search that contained your term. By entering your keywords without brackets or double quotes around it (the default way keyword entries are added), your ad displays not only when any of the words are used within the search, but also when Google feels there is relevancy to the search and your ad. So your social media marketing keyword phrase would display for any search that contains "social", "media" and "marketing" and possibly for someone searching for a PR agency.
At first glance, that sounds reasonable, but one must be cautious. Depending on the phrase, broad match can result in the ad displaying for terms that are not relevant.
To avoid wasting your budget on non-relevant clicks, you can:
- Avoid broad match all together and stick with exact and phrase match. This gives you total control over when your ads will run.
- Use it for phrases containing four or more keywords to lessen the chance that your ad will be displayed for non-relevant searches;
- Diligently identify non-relevant terms where your ad gets displayed and add them to your negative keyword list. Negative keywords eliminate your ad from showing when a search is made with that term in it. If I didn't want my ad showing for searchs on real estate marketing, then I could add "real estate" to my negative keywords to eliminate my ad from showing when someone searched for "social media marketing for real estate".
The next post will cover another broad match extension called automatic matching, where your ads will show on a broader set of relevant keywords chosen by Google.