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Loah Qwality Add Werds Clix Four U Posted: 16 Aug 2014 07:09 AM PDT Google recently announced they were doing away with exact match AdWords ad targeting this September. They will force all match types to have close variant keyword matching enabled. This means you get misspelled searches, plural versus singular overlap, and an undoing of your tight organization. In some cases the user intent is different between singular and plural versions of a keyword. A singular version search might be looking to buy a single widget, whereas a plural search might be a user wanting to compare different options in the marketplace. In some cases people are looking for different product classes depending on word form:
Where segmenting improved the user experience, boosted conversion rates, made management easier, and improved margins - those benefits are now off the table. CPC isn't the primary issue. Profit margins are what matter. Once you lose the ability to segment you lose the ability to manage your margins. And this auctioneer is known to bid in their own auctions, have random large price spikes, and not give refunds when they are wrong. An offline analogy for this loss of segmentation ... you go to a gas station to get a bottle of water. After grabbing your water and handing the cashier a $20, they give you $3.27 back along with a six pack you didn't want and didn't ask for. Why does a person misspell a keyword? Some common reasons include:
In any of those cases, the typical average value of the expressed intent is usually going to be less than a person who correctly spelled the keyword. Even if spelling errors were intentional and cultural, the ability to segment that and cater the landing page to match disappears. Or if the spelling error was a cue to send people to an introductory page earlier in the conversion funnel, that option is no more. In many accounts the loss of the granular control won't cause too big of a difference. But some advertiser accounts in competitive markets will become less profitable and more expensive to manage:
You might not know which end of the spectrum your account is on until disaster strikes:
Brad Geddes has held many AdWords seminars for Google. What does he think of this news?
A monopoly restricting choice to enhance their own bottom line. It isn't the first time they've done that, and it won't be the last. Have an enhanced weekend! Categories: |
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