SEO
How To Use The Google Ads Search Terms Report
One of the most essential aspects of a profitable Google Ads strategy is reaching the right people, with the right message, while they’re searching.
To do this correctly, you need to know exactly how your ads are doing and what words potential customers are using to search.
This is where the Google Ads search terms report comes in handy.
This report is a goldmine and an invaluable asset to every Google Ads account.
With insights into exact phrases being used to trigger your ads, the search terms report can help:
- Significantly refine your keyword strategy.
- Enhance your targeting.
- Boost your return on investment (ROI).
Let’s get into why the Google Ads search terms report is not only helpful but essential for maximizing Google Ads profitability.
What Is The Google Ads Search Terms Report?
The search terms report is a performance tool that shows how your ad performed when triggered by actual searches on the Google Search Network.
The report shows specific terms and phrases that triggered your ad to show, which helps determine if you’re bidding on the right keywords or using the right match types.
If you find search terms that aren’t relevant for your business, you can easily add them to your negative keyword list repository.
This helps you spend your budget more effectively by ensuring your ads are only triggered for relevant, useful searches by potential customers.
Keep in mind that there is a difference between a search term and a keyword:
- Search term: Shows the exact word or phrase a customer enters on the Google Search Network to trigger an ad.
- Keyword: The word or phrase that Google Ads advertisers target and bid on to show their ads to customers.
How To Create A Search Terms Report
Creating a search terms report in your Google Ads account is simple, and better yet – it can be automated!
To view your search terms report, you’ll need to:
- Log into your Google Ads account.
- Navigate to “Campaigns” >> “Insights & reports” >> “Search terms”
Below is an example of where to navigate in your Google Ads account to find the search terms report.
After running this report, there are multiple actions you can take as a marketer:
- Add top-performing searches to corresponding ad groups as keywords.
- Select the desired match type (e.g. broad, phrase, exact) if adding new keywords.
- Add irrelevant search terms to a negative keyword list.
3 Ways To Use Search Terms Report Data
As mentioned above, there are numerous ways you can use the search terms report data to optimize campaign performance.
Let’s take a look at three examples of how to use this report to get the best bang for your buck.
1. Refine Existing Keyword Lists
The first area the search terms report can help with is refining existing keyword lists.
By combing through the search terms report, you can find areas of opportunities, including:
- What searches are leading to conversions.
- What searches are irrelevant to the product or service.
- What searches have high impressions but low clicks.
- How searches are being mapped to existing keywords and ad groups.
For searches leading to conversions, it likely makes sense to add those as keywords to an existing ad group or create a new ad group.
If you’re finding some searches to be irrelevant to what you’re selling, it’s best to add them as negative keywords. That prevents your ad from showing up for that search moving forward.
If some searches have a high volume of impressions, but very few clicks, these will take further consideration. If it’s a keyword worth bidding on, it may indicate that the bid strategy isn’t competitive enough – meaning you’ll have to take action on your bid strategy.
If a search term is being triggered by multiple keywords and ad groups, this is a case of cross-pollution of keywords. This can lead to lower ROI because it’s essentially having multiple keywords bid on that search term, which can drive up the cost. If this happens, you have a few options:
- Review and update existing keyword match types as necessary.
- Add negative keywords where appropriate at the ad group or campaign level to avoid cross-pollution.
Ultimately, using the search terms report in this way allows you to determine what is performing well and eliminate poor performers.
2. Understand How Your Audience Is Actually Searching For Your Product
Something I often see is a mismatch of how a company talks about its product or service vs. how a customer is actually searching for it in the real world.
If you’re bidding on keywords you think describe your product or service but are not getting any traction, you could be misaligning expectations.
Oftentimes, searches that lead to conversions are from terms you wouldn’t have thought to bid on without looking at the search terms report.
One of this report’s most underutilized use cases is finding lesser-known ways customers are searching for and finding your product.
Finding these types of keywords may result in the creation of a new campaign, especially if the search terms don’t fit existing ad group structures.
Building out campaigns by different search themes allows for appropriate bidding strategies for each because not all keyword values are created equal!
Understanding how a customer is describing their need for a product or service not only helps your keyword strategy but can lead to better-aligned product positioning.
This leads us to a third way the search term report can help your campaigns.
3. Optimize Ad Copy and Landing Pages
As discussed in #2, customers’ language and phrases can provide valuable insights into their needs and preferences.
Marketers can use the search terms report to better tailor ad copy, making it more relevant and appealing to prospective customers.
And let’s not forget about the corresponding landing page!
Once a user clicks on an ad, they expect to see an alignment of what they searched for and what is presented on a website.
Make sure that landing page content is updated regularly to better match the searcher’s intent.
This can result in a better user experience and an improvement in conversion rates.
How Using The Search Terms Report Can Help ROI
All three examples above are ways that the search terms report can improve campaign ROI.
How so?
Let’s take a look at each example further.
How Refining Keywords Helps ROI
Part of refining existing keywords is negating any irrelevant search terms that trigger an ad.
Having a solid negative keyword strategy gets rid of “unwanted” spending on keywords that don’t make sense.
That previously “wasted” spend then gets redirected to campaigns that regularly drive higher ROI.
Additionally, adding top-performing search terms gives you better control from a bid strategy perspective.
Being able to pull the appropriate levers and setting proper bid strategies by search theme ultimately leads to better ROI.
How Understanding Audience Intent Helps ROI
By understanding the exact language and search terms that potential customers use, marketers can update ad copy and landing pages to better match those searches.
This can increase ad relevance and Ad Rank within Google Ads.
These items help with keyword Quality Score, which can help reduce CPCs as your Quality Score increases.
More relevant ads likely lead to higher click-through rates, which leads to a higher likelihood of converting those users!
How Updating Ad Copy And Landing Pages Helps ROI
This example goes hand-in-hand with the above recommendation.
As you start to better understand the audience’s search intent, updating ad copy and landing pages to reflect their search indicates better ad relevance.
Once a user clicks on that relevant ad, they find the content of the landing page matches better to what they’re looking for.
This enhanced relevance can significantly increase the likelihood of conversion, which ultimately boosts ROI.
Use This Report To Make Data-Driven Decisions
Google Ads is an integral part of any digital marketing strategy, often accounting for a large portion of your marketing budget.
By regularly reviewing the search terms report, you can refine your marketing budget to make your Google Ads campaigns more effective.
Using this report to make data-driven decisions that fine-tune multiple facets of campaign management leads to more effective ad spending, higher conversions, and ultimately higher ROI.
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