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We Tested Pure Broad Match Keywords & Here’s What We Found



This post was written by: Chris Konowal, Kylene Holup, and Crystal Hopkins.

As a Paid Media Manager, I’m sure you’ve been seeing Pure Broad Match expansions show up as a recommendation within Google Ads over the last several months.

With the consolidation of Broad Match Modified with Phrase Match, Google has been encouraging our team to lean into Pure Broad Match whenever possible. Google has called out that this keyword Match type can capture net new conversions at a CPA similar to Phrase or Exact when combined with automated bidding.

We tested this recommendation on three accounts at Seer and wanted to share the results! Keep reading for a recap of what we found.


💡 TL;DR: Pure Broad Match consistently performed less efficiently than Exact and Phrase Match in terms of CPA.

We recommend only testing Pure Broad Match keywords when the campaign meets the below criteria:

  • The campaign is also using audience targeting as part of an RLSA effort
  • The campaign is not capped by budget

We found that Pure Broad Match keywords trigger terms that are too vague and/or general to drive efficient performance. That is why we recommend layering an additional level of audience qualification to better vet users before bidding on them.

We set up campaign experiments running a 50/50 split between the control and experiment. The control leveraged Phrase and Exact Match keywords, while the experiment used only Pure Broad Match keywords.

Test A:

  • Goal: Increase conversion volume for campaigns that were not meeting their budget goals.
  • Hypothesis: Broad Match keywords would capture net new queries that weren’t currently being triggered by Phrase and Exact and drive more conversions at a similar CPA as the control campaign. 
  • Results: After the initial performance check-in (two weeks after launch), the Broad Match Experiment drove -50% fewer conversions than the control at a CPA 62% greater than the control. ROAS dropped by -47% as well. 

We noticed that Broad Match triggering some irrelevant queries, so we negated these in hopes that it would drive more relevant traffic.

After implementing the negative keywords, we conducted a second check-in one month after launch. The Experiment slightly improved, but was still performing significantly lower than the control: -36% conversions, +49% CPA, -37% ROAS. 

These results were statistically significant, so we ended the experiment and chose NOT to move forward with Broad Match keywords.

Test B:

  • Goal: Increase conversion volume for a campaign that was not losing impression share to budget.
  • Hypothesis: Broad Match would capture net new queries outside of Phrase and Exact, and return more conversions at a similar CPA to the control campaign.
  • Results: After conducting the initial performance check-in when the experiment was live for two weeks, the experiment campaign generated a CPA of 52% higher than the control campaign. Since the Broad Match keywords were seeing a significantly cheaper CPC, the thinking was to add negative keywords to the campaign to better guide the bidding algorithm and remove irrelevant searches.

However, when following up another two weeks later the control campaign saw improve, while the experiment did not generate any conversion during this time period. The search terms the keywords were matching to were still fairly irrelevant to the product/service being offered by the client.

We ultimately ended the test and are moving forward leveraging ONLY Phrase and Exact Match keywords at this time.

Test C:

  • Goal: Expand reach and volume for keywords struggling to generate traffic.
  • Hypothesis: Duplicating existing campaigns which bid only on Broad Match terms will capture relevant queries outside of Phrase and Exact, and will boost volume at a similar CPA to the control campaigns.
  • Results: After collecting a month of data, the Broad Match experiment saw a CPA 74% greater than that of the control campaign.

This test resulted in a similar conclusion as others, so we ended the experiment early and did NOT continue using Broad Match keywords.

In Conclusion

Overall, we don’t recommend using Pure Broad Match keywords unless your campaign meets the criteria we mentioned above:

  • The campaign is also using audience targeting as part of an RLSA effort
  • The campaign is not capped by budget

However, Google is always iterating on their products and working to improve the quality of their keyword targeting.

While pure broad match keywords may be less effective in prospecting campaigns at the moment, they’re worth keeping an eye on and testing in the future!


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