This makes absolutely no sense.
I asked for an exception yesterday and was blown off. Today after I got the "you've reached unmanageable" message I've written again. No reply yet.
ARGH--I am so frustrated!
But, how so often, Google won't tell us more about it - and prevents us spending our money. I don't understand that :(
- Jan
Considering I spend about $5000 a month with them you'd think they want my business. Apparently not.
I can't resume a paused campaign either because it puts me over the imaginary, top-secret, "if I tell you I have to kill you limit" they've created.
That being said, it definitely looks like a glitch if it gave a warning first and doesn't allow you to add new keywords after deleting it.
Obviously $5000 a month isn't much to some of you big spenders, but I spend my time finding those niche words that I can still get for cheap. Everyone else can fight it out over the high-priced ones. I'll stick to the strategy that been supporting me full-time for over a year.
For the record, I spend $5K a day and have 300K keywords and they have never given me any trouble with management.
On google my understanding is that exact matches like "rent a blue widget in new york city" get listed before broad matches like "blue widget".
That is not my understanding. The way I understand it the only real benefit to exact matches is that most likely your CTR will be higher, and thus it will help you rank higher than the next guy who is paying the same amount but bidding on a broad match term. If exact matches are always listed higher than everyone and their brother would have 500,000 keywords and I just don't see it happening (or being practical for google).
On google my understanding is that exact matches like "rent a blue widget in new york city" get listed before broad matches like "blue widget". I know that is how Overture does it. So nitch words can be quite affordable. Please correct me if I am wrong.
Every keyword that qualifies to be shown goes through the same ad rank formula. No priority is given to exact matches.
The two reasons exacts work better are:
1. you know they will show if that search is completed. A phrase match keyword might not show for some searches containing your phrase.
2. it should get a high ctr since you're specifically bidding on that keyword, and presumably your ad is targeted to that search.