ClickEquations Blog

A Serious Look at Paid Search Marketing Strategies, Tactics & Tools

Secret Truth Series #12: Quality Score Friend Or Foe?

The folks at Google are masters of the art of positioning.

Nearly every element of their products – at last the core ones like AdWords and Gmail – and even moreso their public statement describing features and rule changes – make them look unbelievably helpful and benevalent.

Obviously, much of what they do is really great and has benefit to us as users and advertisers. So this isn’t that surprising even if the skill of it is impressive.

But other times, when what they’re doing is primarily in their own interest and of limited value to the advertiser, they’re still somehow able to describe everything in a way that makes you want to thank them for being so kind. Remember the announcement of expanded-broad-match, or the non-announcement of session-based matching?

All of which leads, unexpectedly, to Secret Truth #12 – From the advertisers viewpoint, quality score really is a measure of qualty.

Who Beneits? Follow The Money.

In a perfect world it really is in Google’s interest to create features and set rules that benefit searchers, advertisers, and Google themselves.

  • If users aren’t satisfied with they’re Google experience they won’t come back, or at least may not conduct as many searches.
  • If advertisers aren’t satisfied they will cut budgets or bids.
  • If Google isn’t raking it in then the free Odwalla drinks in the lobbies may have to go

Of course, not every decision can share the benefits equally. Most don’t. For a lot different reasons, and much of the evaluation is naturally subjective. But broadly speaking quality score does share the wealth pretty fairly.

  • Users have a better chance of seeing ads that will satisfy them relative to their query and intent.
  • Advertisers get more traffic from ads that satisfy users at a lower price, and are discouraged from wasting money on inappropriate ads.
  • Google satisfies its searchers, its advertisers, and maximizes revenue.

Let’s look at each of these in a bit more detail.

Quality Score And Searchers

I was on a panel at SMX with Nick Fox of Google last year, and he explained quality score as being in many ways a ‘wisdom of the crowds’ system.

If a lot of people who searched was matched with a particular keyword clicked on a particular ad, that ad is by definition of high quality. It was ‘voted’ as being good by the people who matter. It’s hard to argue with that logic.

This why CTR is by far the largest and most important element of the quality score calculation.

Quality Score And Advertisers

The fact that high quality scores reward you with more impressions, higher positions, and lower CPCs, while low quality scores do the exact opposite, is good for advertisers. If you accept (for the moment) that the quality score calculation has effectively rated the likelihood of your keyord-ad combo to succeed in attracting a particular searcher, they it’s good for you as an advertiser that AdWords shows your ads more when it’s got a higher chance of success and less when it has a lower one.

It’s even good, in a slightly strange way, that they give you a discount when your quality score is high and make you pay a penalty when it is low. Like all taxes the penalty is meant (partially) to shift behavior.

They’re giving you a low score, making that (sort of) clear, and charging you more (less clear, but still true) – they’re really asking you to fix the problem or quit advertising.

It may be tough love, but it can be considered well intentioned.

Quality Score And Google.

Make no mistake about it. Quality Score is a revenue optimization algorithm.

Ads which get the most clicks (and therefore drive the most revenue) are promoted while ads that get less clicks (and generate less revenue) are supressed. And you can be sure the discount given for high quality scores is more than made up for in the volume of clicks and total revenue they generate.

This is where the win-win-win comes from. Google makes less money if you have low quality scores. They don’t need the bell curve. Every time you improve quality score, they make more money. They really don’t want to see you suffer with those QS=3 keywords!

The Devil In The Details

We could talk endlessly (and have) about the details of all the elements which influence quality score, and how fair or accurate they are in really predicting quality. Those are fair discussions, but broadly speaking there is little doubt quality score works and google is working pretty consistently to make it better – in ways that will continue to benefit all parties for the reasons described above.

It’s worth knowing the details of how it’s calculated so you can take actions to increase your scores. It’s worth knowing how it’s used so you can intelligently react to your scores.

But mostly it’s worth doing the work that results from that learning to actually improve your scores, or make the tough decisions to stop buying keywords where your score are bad and probably always will be.

Quality score is a tough and not entirely transparent task master. But I do believe that quality score is your friend.

What Do You Think?

This blog post is part of a series extending and amplifying the ideas in our free ebook ‘21 Secret Truths of High-Resolution PPC‘.

What they’re saying: “Everything you know about AdWords is the basics Google wanted you to know. Just enough to get you hooked. But what if there was fundamental secrets that they neglected to share? Would you want to know them? Now you can! 21 Secrets Truths is what you must read, no, act on, before your competitors do.”

- Bryan Eisenberg Conversion Expert and New York Times Best-Selling Author ’.

Download Your Copy Today
.

.

  • http://www.crearecommunications.co.uk Mike

    I would be keen to learn how Google determines high quality and low quality searches. I also wonder how many advertisers are savvy to promote their website in the most advantageous way with Adwords.

  • Jessica

    One question maybe some of your readers can give me some feedback on. I manage the PPC account for one of our product lines and although I know the rules that a better CTR should equal a better quality score, that doesn't seem to be the case with this account. Some of my keywords with 5-12% CTR have quality scores of 3-4 and others that have never had a click are 7's, 8's, and even 9. Does this make sense to anybody? What am I missing?

  • http://clickequations.com Craig Danuloff

    Jessica – Click-through-rates are relative to the keyword – so a 10% CTR might earn a great quality score for one keyword, and a poor quality score for another. There is no universal target click-through-rate. Having said that, if you have a double-digit CTR and still have a QS as low as 3-4, my guess is there is something else wrong. Look in AdWords for a relevance or landing page warning (marked 'poor' in the pop-up near the keyword).

  • vivilover

    First, it is your best choice, I like it very much and hope.
    Hi there people… Hows hanging lately? Checkout this sweet link
    As you all kown, air jordan, a household name as air jordans or jordans, is a brand of shoes which are produced by Nike company. Now,air jordan 2010 shoes is hot sale..Welcome to our website…

    cheap jordan shoes
    world cup 2010 jersey
    MBT shoes
    coach handbags
    NIKE dunk shoes

    ave you ever hear MBT Tataga,it is a new style of mbt shoes ,buy a mbt for your health
    cheap jordan shoes http://www.jordans2010.com
    world cup 2010 jersey http://www.uniform-jersey.com
    coach handbags http://www.likehandbags.com
    MBT shoes http://www.usambts.com
    http://www.topsdunks.com

  • Pingback: Secret Truth Series #17: Lament Of The Text Ad Copywriter | The ClickEquations Blog

  • Pingback: 21 Secret Truths of PPC – The Summary | The ClickEquations Blog

Some of Our Clients

  • Comcast
  • Clix Marketing
  • Beau-coup
  • Uncommon Goods
  • Gyro:HSR
  • Portent Interactive
Get Adobe Flash player