Data is the foundation of pay-per-click marketing; it’s both the by-product of every action undertaken, and the source of denoting which action is the most effective to take next. But not all PPC marketers are aware of the vast sources of keyword and search term data – local to their PPC campaigns and elsewhere – available for them to leverage. In this article, we discuss three really useful sources that you might not be aware of.

1. Google Ads: search term reports

It’s very likely you’re aware of keyword targeting on Google Ads – even if you don’t work in the PPC world, ‘keywords’ and ‘AdWords’ are pretty synonymous – but a surprising amount of people seemingly don’t know that targeting a specific keyword doesn’t necessarily mean targeting that specific search on Google. Depending on the match type you’re using, your keyword could match almost anything.

While match types and how keyword matching works are a different conversation altogether, routinely checking what your keywords are matching to both prevent wasting budget on poor quality or irrelevant traffic, and to mine for new keyword ideas is an integral part of optimal account management.

Finding your search terms couldn’t be easier:

Navigate to the keyword you’d like to view search terms of

Select the keyword via the selection box left of its status icon

Select the ‘Details’ drop down, in here there is a search terms section

Click on the ‘Selected’ option

Now you’ve found them, what do you do with them? The two main uses for search term reports are:

New negative keywords: add terms that waste money as negatives to your ad group or campaign to stop matching those search terms

New keywords: add terms that perform well into your account in their own ad group, targeting them directly will enable you to set a bid for that term individually

2. Google AdWords shopping search term reports



While Shopping campaigns don’t rely on keyword targeting to work, you can still see what terms are matching your products/product groups and prevent irrelevant and poor performing traffic from matching them. This is significantly more important on Shopping than it is with standard search campaigns as you’re at the mercy of Google to determine which user searches are relevant to the products you’re advertising. Frequently Google will display your “HP Designjet 3200PS Wide Format Printer” for users searching for “printers” or “home printers” even though it’s a commercial printer used for printing big road-side adverts – this is just one example.

The process for this is very similar to finding the search terms for keywords:

Navigate to the product group in your shopping campaign that you would like to see search terms of

Navigate to the ‘Keywords’ tab

Select the ‘Details’ drop down

Under the ‘Search Terms’ section select the ‘All’ option – this will display all search terms that have matched that product group

The aforementioned main use for search terms on shopping is negative keyword discovery (used for preventing irrelevant, poor performing traffic matching your products and wasting your budget), but you can also use this data for finding new keywords to target on search.

While there isn’t a massively consistent correlation between the performance of terms on shopping campaigns and the same search terms on Google (due to the nature of the advert) it can still be a great way of uncovering new keyword sets you may have missed during previous passes of keyword research.

3. Google Search Autocomplete

Another great way to mine for new keywords that is overlooked quite often is – essentially abusing – Google’s autocomplete system when you perform a search.

When you start typing a search, Google provides a list of the most common suggestions. You can use scripts to pull this data for you, but to explain the principles we can do a few manually.

As you can see in the image when searching for ‘vertical leap’, Google is suggesting that I’m looking for one of the four options below the search bar:

Vertical leap seo

Vertical leap ltd

Vertical leap test

Vertical leap marketing

If I search for ‘vertical leap a’ Google will suggest searches where a word starting with ‘a’ was used after it.

We can repeat this process using the alphabet a through z, numbers 0 through 1 and combinations of both (aa, ab, ac, 1a, 1b, 1c, aa1, ab1 etc) – though I’d stick to just doing single letter alphabet searches and numbers if you’re doing it manually. Copy what Google suggests as you go into a notepad and eventually you’ll have a huge list of new terms to consider.

A few really good aspects of terms found via the autocomplete tool:

Because they have a high enough search volume to be indexed in Google’s autocomplete tool, they’re very likely indexed in Google’s AdWords system (meaning they won’t have too low search volumes to target)

It’s a really easy way to get a head start on negative keywords before your campaigns go live, reducing the risk of wasting spend from the start

Need help with your PPC?

If you’re unsure about how to use the data available to you in order to get more from your PPC campaigns, speak to our experts today on 023 9283 0281. In the meantime, check out these related articles:

Which type of PPC advert works best?

Inside Vertical Leap: What goes on behind the PPC metrics?

PPC: How long does it really take to get results?