I've been having a discussion with an associate of mine about the use of broad match in AdWords. I'm of the opinion that broad match, in a lot of cases, is a lazy half assed way to get a campaign going. There are some cases/objectives where broad match makes sense but 99 times out of 100 broad match is used by people who really don't have a clue how AdWords works. Getting rid of all the broad match campaigns is one of the first things I do when I take over an account. Thoughts?
I agree that it's normally more effective to just use the exact or phrase match options but in some cases it can be useful to use the broad match to increase traffic.
I prefer to use Broad Match, adding also all possible Negative keywords to the campaign I can imagine to preventing hurting CTR%. This brings more traffic without need bidding high prices. Normally my campaigns has around 300 ~ 600 negative keywords
Another reason to not use broad match is that Google has recently started running Exact Match keywords as a priority over broad match and phrase match.
This is not so true, Priority is related with Keywords Quality Score and Keywords Bid Price for a long time and they have not changed this recently to nothing related with the matching option.
Interesting take on it. Don't you think you could accomplish the same - and be a little more targetted - by using exact match? I've never seen anything that leads me to belive exact matching is more expensive.
If your originating keyword source is broad enough (and I bet we're all doing similar) to cover most combinations of searches for your specific market, then exact match is ideal since you won't get "chance" impressions diluting your CTR. However, if anyone has any thoughts otherwise, please let me know! I'm quite keen on hearing you takes
When a user enters a keyword into Google, is the quality score based at keyword level, ad group level or capaign level? e.g. Campaign - First Name Ad group - Joe Keyword 1 - Joe Bloggs CTR 90% Keyword 2 - Joe Gloggs CTR 5% Keyword 3 - Joe Smoggs CTR 1% e.g. does it matter having bad performing keywords in an adgroup? would Joe Bloggs keyword perform just as well if remains in the same ad group than if it was on its own adgroup and own capaign, where it was the only keyword