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When Exact Match Isn’t Exactly Exact Match…Variant Matching Coming to AdWords

If you’ve logged in to your AdWords account recently, you’ve probably seen this alert:

New! Improvements coming to exact match and phrase match

Seeing as they’re putting in front & center, over & over again in everyone’s account, it must be kind of a big deal, so what exactly does this mean? In short, exact match is no longer exactly exact match — both phrase and exact match keywords will begin showing for close variations such as plural variations, common misspellings, and acronyms. Anyone with bad memories from the Expanded Broad Match rollout might see this as another attempt by Google to juice their ad revenue. But, it could actually make life a lot easier for those of us running paid search campaigns. Much more compact keyword lists means less time vectoring out keyword variations during initial builds, more manageable ad groups, and less anxiety over missing important variations. On the other hand, the change will require close attention once it launches in mid-May, and may require some proactive adjustments to your current campaigns:

One final note: Google has obviously been on a long-term push for smaller keyword lists in recent years. The introduction of Low Search Volume/Rarely Shown Due to Low Quality Scores notices in AdWords, the AdWords Express product, and now variant matching, can all be seen as discouraging advertisers from creating giant, unwieldy campaigns. And, fighting Google is rarely a winning proposition — rather than trying to work around variant matching so you can keep your 200-word branded ad group intact, we would generally suggest you try to embrace the change and work towards more compact keyword lists.

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