Niche PPC Phrases Update

2:19 pm Google Adwords

Following on from my last post about the restrictions on using niche phrases in Google Adwords, I’ve had an interesting discussion with a Google rep.  In a nutshell, the problem is that Adwords won’t allow adverts to be visible when people type what it considers to be particularly niche phrases.  So, if I wanted ‘red widgets with blue spots’ as a phrase to trigger an advert in Google Sponsored Link results, then the Google system would likely tell me that:

The keyword phrase that you have entered has a low search volume and is not showing any of your ads. 

In an ideal world it should really be my choice as an advertiser whether I have an advert appear when a certain phrase is typed, but Google is, apparently, God and so I have to do as I’m told.  Back to the Google rep …

One of the reasons that the Adwords system won’t allow numerous types of (what it considers to be) niche phrases to trigger adverts is that it would be open to abuse by organisations that have the money/resources to abuse the system.   Using widgets as the example, a company could set up numerous weird variations of phrases such as:

  • widgets for midgets
  • red widgets for churches
  • blue widgets with green stripes
  • etc.

…. with the sole purpose of attracting clicks from anyone who happened to type those phrases.  Those clicks, because the phrases would be so niche, would be really cheap, and the company would become a regular fixture in the Sponsored Links regardless of what variations people typed on a theme.  This would basically mean that the searcher could be pulled into clicking on an advert that may not actually deliver what they were looking for, which would be a negative experience for the searcher and so make them less likely to click on Sponsored Links in the future (which is a negative for Google).

While I fully understand that Google doesn’t want people to take advantage of the system by creating thousands of niche phrases that don’t result in a positive customer experience, is the answer really to penalise advertisers to the level they currently are?    To take an example, if an IT support company wants to advertise under phrases such as:

  • Maidstone PC experts
  • Computer support companies Maidstone
  • Maidstone PC consultants

… because they can help people with IT problems in the Maidstone area, then surely they should be able to do so?  But no, because the Google system considers such phrases are ‘too niche’ then they’re penalised and instead are faced with advertising using more generic phrases that end up costing a lot more.

The big issue here is that surely the Google system can tell the difference between a major abuser of the system trying to capitalise on cheap clicks, and an advertiser with a limited budget and what is quite obviously a sensible campaign setup?

The answer, unfortunately, is that it’s a lot easier, and more profitable, for Google to stop companies from using niche keyword phrases, than to apply more thinking to the issue and start to understand that smaller companies won’t be able to afford the ever-increasing click costs for certain types of phrases and so will go elsewhere.   When that happens, the Sponsored Links will become purely a directory of those companies that have the deepest pockets and the smaller advertisers (which make up a huge number when their buying power is combined) will have found other ways to advertise their products and services.

 

 

2 Responses

  1. Mark Says:

    I too am suffering with clients websites who would desperately like google to ‘lift’ this restriction. I do adwords for a local plumber. When you add an exact phrase suck as [boiler services herne bay] google states that this ad will not show until more people search for it. Well all my guy needs is 3 or 4 a month and he’d be very happy. They seems to be happier with crappy sites in the organics, such as zettai and matron who don’t actually provide anything apart from more stuff to click on rather than someone who can help them out. Grrrrr.

  2. admin Says:

    I totally agree with you. It’s an insane situation but I expect to see it lifted in time when Google wake up to the fact that ’small’ businesses actually mean big business when accumulated together. You may remember back to the ‘old days’ when, if there wasn’t much competition, Google would allow adverts to list and as long as they had reasonable CTR compared to impressions then they’d stay live. That was a fair system (although I appreciate it was open to abuse).

    When Google finally give up trying to push people down the content network route, or insisting that broad match is a good solution, they may wake up and innovate a bit (the ways they could do this are so obvious to many of us in this industry). In reality, that innovation may only come if there’s ever a day that Yahoo or Microsoft get their act together instead of playing sheep.

    I think you’ll find, as I have, that people will move more towards natural SEO and I’ve been getting some great results for clients. Logically though, it’s daft – Google stops niche phrases from triggering adverts (even when highly relevant) so the advertiser has to find other options. One such option is natural SEO, which makes no money for Google and when it starts working makes them keen to stay on that path instead of considering PPC, or even clicking on PPC adverts themselves in the future (on principle).

    If 2009 is the Chinese year of the Ox, I think that’s the case for most people, but within Google itself it’s going to be yet another year of the Ostrich.

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