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I'm creating an Google Ads search campaign for a website that sells PVC and wooden windows and doors.

In general it works fine, but I noticed that people are actually searching mainly for "plastic windows" because that's how an average person calls PVC windows in my native language. I've added this as a limited broad search with +plastic +windows. However, Google shows the "landing page experience is below average" warning for the keyword, and that might be the reason why my ad is often not displaying for the keyword and I need to keep increasing my bid value for it.

I have plastic windows in meta tag of my website, but I cannot use the term in the text nor in the ads because that's not the official, professional name for the product.

What else could I do to increase my landing page quality score for those keywords?

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  • Why do you have to use only the official professional name for the product? Mar 13, 2020 at 10:02
  • Because using non-official terms would be considered "bad taste". Yeah, that's somewhat contradicting - majority of potential customers are using unofficial terms but still expecting the website to look "professional" and might be scared away otherwise. That might be a cultural thing of my nation, unfortunately. It's like getting used to searching for "bucks" but expecting the website to mention only "dollars". Mar 13, 2020 at 10:18
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    Just some rambling ideas: Does vinyl translate? In the US, they're called vinyl windows. Could you create another page that about "plastic windows" but linked to your landing page for purchases? This way, you might be "educating" Google's engine about the wider range of related terms.
    – Trebor
    Mar 17, 2020 at 0:30

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I'm going to give you a few things to try in hopes that one of them will work for you because depending on circumstances you may or may not be willing or able to use them:

If this is a keyword important enough to merit special attention (it sounds like it is) then make sure you split it out into its own campaign(s).

Getting the keyword into the ads

1.) I'd try creating a "Dynamic Search Ads" campaign...you don't choose keywords, you just tell Google to use the content of some or all URLs on the website and to show your ads on queries it think are relevant and Google writes the headlines for you...if the person searches "plastic windows", the headline Google writes may use that term but you can avoid having ads that include the term.

2.) I'd also create a campaign that is keyword targeted but that uses Dynamic Keyword Insertion for the same reasons as above (then see which campaign performs better)...you could use DKI to insert those keywords in a headline, the description and even the display URL.

Getting the keyword onto the page

3.) I don't think the Google Ads Bot factors meta tags into QS but could you rename assets like <img src="plastic-windows-and-pvc-windows.jpg" alt="plastic windows is a term sometimes used to describe PVC windows">. I'm not sure if filenames and alt text are factored but I usually optimize them anyway and they aren't "visible" unless you look at the source code.

4.) If you can get away with changes that are only visible in the source code, then you could try (no guarantees, try at your own risk and make sure the pages are set to noindex so you don't hurt your organic rankings) old school, on-page, blackhat SEO tricks like making text the same color as the page background.

Manipulating how QS is calculated

5.) When/if you create those new campaigns consider creating an "easy" conversion (use a conversion metric like a 10 second phone call or one that fires on an event from Google Analytics like a "scroll" event or a "click" event)...that way you get a high conversion rate (at first), then as time progresses you create new ads in the same campaigns that use the standard conversion metrics.

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