Pay-per-click (PPC) advertising can be an incredibly powerful tool, but only when it’s executed in a highly targeted manner. PPC works when your ads appear to potential customers or clients who are searching for highly relevant and desirable potential keywords. When your ads start ranking for the wrong keywords, your campaigns can receive a large number of irrelevant clicks, which will waste time and money and destroy your ROI (return on investment).
Fortunately, Google is aware of this problem, and they’ve provided negative keywords as a solution within their Google Ads (formerly Google AdWords) PPC platform. Negative keywords can help advertisers better target their ads by cutting down on irrelevant clicks, which can save an enormous amount of money in the long run.
On their help page for negative keywords, Google has a perfect example for why these keywords are so important when creating search ads. Imagine you’re an optometrist who sells eyeglasses. You know many people refer to your products as simply “glasses” instead of “eyeglasses,” so your ads contain lots of instances of the word “glasses.”
However, without negative keywords, your ads are now likely to show up when people perform unrelated searches that use the word “glasses,” like searches for cocktail glasses and wine glasses. If someone who searches for one of these nonrelevant terms sees one of your ads and clicks on it (perhaps because they don’t realize it’s for the wrong type of glasses), you’ll have to pay for that click, and there’s almost no chance it will bring you a customer.
Google Ads gives you three different match types you can use for your negative keywords:
Knowing when to use each negative match type takes some experience and finesse, but with practice (or with help from an experienced PPC marketing partner), you’ll get it down.
You have three primary methods available you can use to find negative keywords for your PPC ad campaigns.
When you put a keyword into Keyword Planner, you’ll get a large list of related keywords that you can use to generate ideas for negative keywords. For example, you can see that when we put “custom glasses” into Keyword Planner, our search results include some potential negative keyword phrases we haven’t thought of yet, such as “champagne,” “shot,” and “engraved.”
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Finally, people often make unexpected turns of phrase and typos in their web searches, so you may want to expand your list of negative keywords to include common misspellings and close variations.
Once you’ve got a hefty negative keyword list, you need to add those keywords to your ad groups in Google Ads. Fortunately, this process is easy. Just navigate to “Negative Keywords” under the “Keywords” on the left-hand-side menu of your Google Ads interface, then use the option that says “+Negative Keywords.”
Yes, you can. However, negative keywords aren’t as precise on Google’s Display Network as they are on the Search Network, so your ad might still show up for searches that contain the negative keywords you’ve specified. Still, that doesn’t mean it’s not worthwhile to use negative keywords in display campaigns. Avoiding some irrelevant clicks is better than avoiding none.
Also, note that for display and video campaigns, Google only allows broad match negative keywords.
The process for gathering negative keywords for your display campaigns is the same as we described throughout this article, and the method to add them is identical as well.
Getting the most out of your PPC budget takes expertise, experience, and dedication. At LaFleur, we employ full-time PPC specialists who have years of experience running efficient, affordable search and display ad campaigns for businesses of all sizes. If you’re ready to realize the possibilities of PPC, call us at (888) 222-1512 or use our online contact form to get in touch.
References
About negative keywords. (n.d.). Google Ads Help. Retrieved from https://support.google.com/google-ads/answer/2453972?hl=en