Google AdWords Quality Score Factors Demystified
Posted: April 3, 2007
There are several different factors that affect Google AdWords Quality Score. It’s time to walk through each in detail and list the major contributing factors to each.First, it’s important to note why Quality Score matters. One’s Ad Rank(the position an ad shows on a search result or across the content network) is based upon max cost per click and quality score. The current formula is:
Ad Rank = [(keyword / ad group] quality score) X Max CPC
The reason keyword / ad group is in brackets is that for search the keyword quality score is used and for content the ad group quality score is used.
It’s very possible to pay less than your competitors and have a higher ad rank. Instead of raising bids, there are times when it’s more appropriate to raise quality score.
For keywords, every keyword has a quality score associated with it. So, when talking about the below factors, they exist at the keyword level. This is important to keep in mind when talking about ad copy (and possibly landing pages) as it will be associated with multiple keywords.
Note:how to view your quality score.
Let’s dig into the factors.
Click Through Rate on Google.com
- All time history
- Most recent history
It’s important to note, this is the CTR on Google.com only. The search network CTR does not matter. The click through rate on the content network does not matter. Google.com is the only search interface that Google can completely control and measure, therefore, it’s the only place where CTR matters (in terms of quality score, there are some other reasons CTR matters for ad serving).
The CTR is normalized by position. AdWords understands that an ad in position 1 is going to receive (on average) a higher CTR than an ad in position 5. Therefore, they aren’t going to penalize the advertisers in position 5 for having a lower click through rate than the advertiser in the first position.
The CTR is predicted by keyword. Search intent differs by keyword. The search term ‘TV’ is very ambiguous. It could be a search for TV repair, plasma TV, TV guide, TV instructions, etc. Therefore, it’s predicted CTR is low. There are times that a 2% CTR may be well above the predicted, and hence 2% could be a very high CTR. In other cases, 2% may be quite low because the term is very commercial, the user intent well known, and those search results could have CTRs in the 8%+ range.
All time history is used. A keyword’s all time CTR history within your account influences the ranking algorithm.
Most recent CTR history. The most recent impressions for a keyword matter more than the all time history. In essence, a keyword can always be saved’.
Ad Copy
How closely does your ad copy reflect your keywords? Ad Group organization is key to starting this process. Your ad copy should describe each keyword in the ad group. Each search has a different user intent, therefore, your ad copy needs to take a user’s intent for that keyword as it relates to your website in mind.
Does your ad contain the keyword? Of course, each ad can not contain every single keyword. Google understands themes, stemming, and latent semantic indexing. If your ad does not contain the keyword (the closest match), does the ad copy contain the overall theme of the keyword? (Again, please read the ad group organization article as themes can be quite granular).
Note: the use of dynamic insertion does not mean your ad copy contains the keyword.
Quick Tip: If you split test ads, you can run an ad copy report that lists the CPC by individual ad. This may give you insight into how the ads are affecting your quality score.
Landing Page
The landing page is where a visitor is sent after clicking on an ad. Often, the quality score of a landing page and the usability of a landing page overlap from what is relevant to quality score versus what a business should be doing to provide a good user experience. Remember, Google thinks of searchers as their users, so they want them to have a good search experience so they come back to Google to search again.
The landing page should, just like the ad copy, contain the keyword or the keyword’s theme. It should also provide a unique experience for the user. Every time someone does a search, they are looking for an answer. Does your page help them find that answer?
A good example is a mortgage form. If someone searches for ‘3 year arm mortgage’, are you sending them to a mortgage form fill? Do they have the opportunity to understand the difference between a ‘3 year arm mortgage’ and an ‘interest only mortgage’?
Here’s a quick checklist for landing pages:
- Does your page collect personal information?
- If so, does it have an SSL certificate and a privacy policy?
- Do you have an ‘about us’ page?
- Do you have a ‘contact us’ page?
- Do you have relevant information to the search query?
- Do you have unique information?
- Do you have related content to the search query?
Related: Google’s Organic webmaster guidelines.
Account Quality Score
I’ll dig into the account quality score more in-depth later. However, the account quality score is used in the keyword quality score formula, so it’s important to define it somewhat.
If you think about all of your keywords and how many impressions and clicks each one received, you could ‘roll up’ your entire account into a single quality score. This is essentially how high (or low) of a quality your entire account has. While this has little impact upon the keyword quality score, it does have some influence. Therefore, under performing keywords can hurt your quality score.
Other Relevancy Factors
“There are over 100 factors that can affect quality score. However, not all will be triggered depending on the conditions involved.†– Google Engineer.
These other factors are items which you will have little or no control over, and won’t even be used at all times, therefore, it’s important not to get too concerned about this ambiguous statement.
If you think about the query ‘plumbing repair’ there are generally two main search intents:
- Someone looking for a plumber
- Someone looking for information to do it them self
In this instance, additional weight for IP targeting may not matter at all. (Other’s may, but in this instance IP targeting won’t make a huge difference).
When changing the query to ‘plumbing repair services’, or ‘Maryland plumbing repair’ odds are one is now looking for a plumber. Suddenly the geographic keywords can trigger IP targeted campaigns. And since it’s most likely a local query, a plumber who is serving ads only to Maryland may receive a little bump over someone bidding on just the keyword ‘plumbing repair’.
However, if the query were ‘plumbing repair books’, that’s not inherently a local query. So now the IP targeting isn’t helping at all, in fact, since one is most likely looking for book reviews or information to do it them self. In this instance, the national book chain bidding on ‘plumbing repair’ may get a bump over the IP targeting campaign bidding on the same keyword.
While these factors could be IP targeting, ad scheduling, personalized search, user location, user intent, demographic targeting, etc - they are small factors and should be understood, but not fretted over.
Closing Thoughts
Once upon a time, Google used a straightforward CTR X CPC method of determining ad rank. This maximized profits. The higher your CTR and the more you bid, the more Google made from each ad position. Quality score doesn’t maximize short term profits - it a move to maximize long term revenue. Google thinks of searchers as their users. If a searcher has a good experience on Google.com, they are more likely to come back and search again, click again, and increase lifetime visitor values.
What quality score does is try to ensure that searchers are having a good experience. If you make decisions around maximizing the user experience, odds are you will be maximizing your quality score in the process. This is not only good from an AdWords quality score standpoint, it’s also good for your website as users are more likely to come back to your site when they have a similar question.
If you are using automated software to change bids based upon some criteria, you shouldn’t just rely on the technology to make all of your decisions, you should also make sure you have a high quality score so that the technology isn’t just changing bids for low quality score keywords and ad copy. Since PPC is the new SEO, how do SEOs do their work? I don’t think you’ll see too many good SEOs automating all of their decision making processes (some - yes, all -no). The same goes for PPC.
Quality score can sound intimidating. It can be frustrating at times. However, once you start to break it down into each factor, and then maximize each of those factors, it’s a very manageable process.
Your quality score is one of the most important items you can understand and improve to help your AdWords rankings. The higher your quality score, the less you are going to pay per click, and the more potential exposure.
Doesn’t everyone want to pay less than their competitors and yet have their ads show higher in the search results?
Related Information:- What determines the ‘Keyword Quality Score’ for AdWords?
- Google AdWords Quality Score Factors Chart
- Google AdWords Quality Score Factors Chart Updated
- What determines the ‘Account Quality Score’ for AdWords?
- What determines the ‘Ad Group Quality Score’ for AdWords?
Comments
25 Responses to “Google AdWords Quality Score Factors Demystified”











I believe you could still clasify the adrank quality score as a short-term profit maximizer. Queries have a lot of variations, and using a lot of common sense rules will help you predict which ad would have a higher CTR for a variation better than taking historical performance. In this case, the quality score inclusion adjusts for errors that might exist in AdWords’ broad matching and averaging of CTRs. For example, bumping up a local match ad is reasonable to do for a query that is regional in nature, you’d expect it to have a higher CTR even if it hasn’t yet established a high CTR on average.
If Google used landing page quality in adranking, then that might be long term thinking. But this is used only for setting minimum bids to determine who really ought to be advertising - getting out the spammers.
[...] Original post by Brad Geddes aka eWhisper [...]
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Brad,
Just to clarify: does “landing page quality” only affect minimum bids OR can it also have a direct impact on your ad’s quality score.
Excelent!!
Thanks you for this information.
Carlos Andres Gallego
Garrett,
Technically, an ‘ad’ doesn’t have a quality score. The ad is a factor in determining the quality score for search, min bid, quality score for the ad group.
I think you might get you question clarified if you read the quality score for search post:
http://www.bgtheory.com/blog/what-determines-the-keyword-quality-score-for-adwords/
[...] the factors that make up an ad group quality score, make sure you understand how each of those factors is determined. Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and [...]
Excellent work, thanks. I consider your blog to be number one of those writing on PPC marketing. With this quality of stuff, no doubt about that.
[...] http://www.bgtheory.com/blog/google-adwords-quality-score-factors-demystified/ [...]
[...] refer to the full list of AdWords Quality Score Factors for an explanation of each factor [...]
Great article Brad!
Your explanations are really clear and now I understand what i couldn’t understand reading the adwords learning center!
Thank you and keep them coming!
Martin
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In The Trenches is a weekly spotlight of tips, tricks, and news about the tools search engine marketing professionals use to give them a leg up on the competition. Today: News from the search engines, today’s in-depth look, “What You Don’t Know Abo…
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