Previous searches affect which sponsored links are displayed
Ok, so what does this mean?
If “blue-widget” or “blue widget” is a term that competitors are not targeting (i.e. searching it for the first time only), one result shows up: “bluewidget.” However, If I searched for βwidgets,β I get sponsored links for βredwidget,β βpurplewidgets,β & βbuy widgets on ebay.β
I donβt click on any of them because the sponsored links spark a memory of βOh, I saw that ad for ‘blue widgets’–I should try searching that.βΒ
I then type in βblue widgetβ or βblue-widgets.β Google will show βbluewidgetsβ sponsored links as well as ads from the previous search, as it still sees these ads as relevant (in the same category) and because βblue-widgetsβ is not a trademark.
After searching for some articles about this online I couldnβt find anything, so I called my Adwords account manager and he confirmed that this is what was happening.
This raises so many questions in my mind:
- Why is Google showing ads for keywords that competitors are not even targeting?
- If I click them, what does this show to the competitor?
- Does it come up as a click for the term βwidgets,β even thought he search term was βblue-widgetβ?
- Is this strategy only to try and make more money from Adwords?
- Isnβt this rewarding those who donβt do research into their keywords (as their ads could show up on keywords that they are not even targeting)?
The only response I got was that it was tested and users preferred seeing more then one sponsored link!
In conclusion, I was told that I should gather all my brand keyword variations, then get a list of ALL our competitors and request to have the competitors removed from those brand term variations. Because they are not trademarked term, they would need to be processed manually, which takes a couple of weeks!
Google, don’t be evil – don’t make me laugh.