PPC
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Gads account organization9 Topics|1 Quiz
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Search ads36 Topics|1 Quiz
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Campaign creation
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Settings (location, language, start/end date, networks, bid strategy (CPA/CPC), budget)
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Location
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Language
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Start / End date
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Networks
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Bid strategy
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Target cost per action (CPA)
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Target return on ad spend (ROAS) (PPC)
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Maximize Conversions (PPC)
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Maximize Conversion Value
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Enhanced cost per click
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Keyword Strategy
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Keyword Research
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Keyword match types
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Exact match
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Phrase match
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Broad Match
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Negative Keywords
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Search terms
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Keywords Adding
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NKW list
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Managing Search Terms
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Long-Tail Keywords
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Create ad groups
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Keyword structure
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SKAG
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Single keyword ad groups
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SKAG`s main benefits
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Drawbacks to using SKAG KW groups
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A-B testing
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Adding a target URL
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Write and start PPC Ads
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Titles
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Descriptions
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Headlines
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Campaign creation
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Display Ads16 Topics|1 Quiz
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Video Ads17 Topics|1 Quiz
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Video Ads
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Choosing a goal
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Choosing Ads Format
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Settings (formats, location, budget)
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Formats
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Skippable in-stream ads
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Non-skippable in-stream ads
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In-feed video ads
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Bumper ads
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Outstream ads
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Masthead ads
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Location
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Excluded location (list)
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CPV bidding
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Target Impression Share Bidding
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Bidding/Budget (PPC) 4
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Create relevant ads
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Video Ads
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Analytics19 Topics|1 Quiz
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Google ads analytics (what is)
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Where to find
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Link Gads to Analytics
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Export data from Google Analytics to GAds reports
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Wasted Spend
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Google Ads metrics
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Quality Score (Google Ads metrics)
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Impression Share (5)
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Click-Through Rate (CTR)
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Account Activity
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Impressions (5)
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CPC
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Setting goals (5)
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Maximum bid
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Quality score (Setting goals)
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Google ads ad ranks
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Long-tail keywords
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Text Ad Optimization
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Conversions
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Google ads analytics (what is)
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GAds Optimization8 Topics|1 Quiz
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Audience Manager8 Topics|1 Quiz
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GAds tools and settings26 Topics|1 Quiz
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Google Ads tools and settings
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Account management tools
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Google Analytics
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Ad Preview and Diagnosis
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Display Planner
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Keyword tools
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Keyword Planner
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SEMrush
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KWFinder
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Ahrefs Keyword Explorer
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GrowthBar
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Long Tail Pro
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Majestic
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Keyword Tool
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Moz Keyword Explorer
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SpyFu
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Bid and budget management tools
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WordStream PPC Advisor
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Optmyzr
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Bing Ad Editor
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Marin
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Acquisio
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Canva
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Facebook Ad Gallery
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AdEspresso
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Google ads Editor
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Google Ads tools and settings
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Google Ads and Facebook9 Topics|1 Quiz
Quizzes
Participants 18
- Anna
- Popova
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What Are Exact Match Keywords?
A keyword setting that allows your ad to show only when someone searches for your keyword or close variants of your keyword.
That means the person searching is using the exact words you’ve included in your keyword, with that exact word order and without any words before or after. So the exact match keyword [best espresso grinder] only shows for that exact search: best espresso grinder. It wouldn’t show if someone was searching for the best espresso grinder under $200. But if you wanted to include it, you could create a new keyword: [best espresso grinder under $200]. Over the years, Google Ads has started to include a lot of variations of your exact match keywords, what Google calls close variants. One obvious takeaway from these changes is that if one keyword will match with more variations, you don’t need to add that many keywords to your account. This is especially handy for things like misspelled words. But let me show you an example of why most advertisers (including me) weren’t too happy with these changes.
For example, [espresso grinder] would also show up for espresso grinders, the plural form. That might seem like a small difference, but the singular and plural forms of a keyword often have a different performance.
How To Use Exact Match
Exact match has a specific symbol you have to add to your keywords, just put your keyword between square brackets [ ]. Note that the entire keyword needs to be contained in the square brackets, variations of this won’t work as they should.
When To Use Exact Match
While a broad match keyword pulls in all sorts of (un)related keywords, you won’t see many new queries coming from exact match keywords. Here is the search terms report for one of campaigns:
You can see that out of 101 clicks, 74 are for the “pure” exact match, 17 for the singular form and the rest are a handful of other variations. While it gets a lot fewer impressions/clicks, it makes up for in precision. Because the match type is so targeted, it allows you to hone in on interesting keywords:
•At launch: if keyword research shows a couple of interesting longer tail keywords with enough search volume, I will add them as exact match keywords
•During optimization: if my modified broad match keywords catch interesting search queries with some volume, I will add these as exact or phrase match to my campaigns. Exact Match Impression Share metrics summarize impression calculate impression share as if all keywords were set to exact match.
The phrase “exact match” is commonly used when targeting your ad to types of searches with Google AdWords. Exact match in AdWords means that you only want your ad to show up for a specific word or phrase. (Importantly, AdWords has recently updated how they treat keywords so that word order and “functional words” within a sentence—i.e. “and,” “or,” “but,” “then,” etc. — don’t matter. The same keywords in different sequence, with or without functional words, may still represent an “exact match.”)
Exact or partial match for organic results
This type of fine-tuned control over how your content is dished up in AdWords doesn’t exist for SEOs who are targeting organic search results. Organic rankings are determined solely by Google’s algorithm and its ever-growing understanding of language and intent.
If you want to understand more about how exact and partial match work in the wild, you can force Google to give you exact match organic results by using the quotations marks search operator.
For example, when searching tiny dancing horse without quotation marks, Google dishes up an array of results—from a Moonwalking Dancing Shetland Pony to a Little Ballerina and Her Dancing Horse. The best thing you can do to help your content rank for your keywords is use your target keyword in your title tag and other relevant places and create content that delves into the topic using synonyms, examples, and whatever else you need until you’re satisfied that you have the best content on the block.