How to Use Negative Keywords to Improve Campaign Performance
Negative keywords are the simplest way to stop wasting budget. They block junk searches so your ads show only to buyers.
Founder-friendly guide. Simple language. Real examples.
What are negative keywords?
A negative keyword tells Google: “Do NOT show my ad when someone searches this.”
Why negative keywords matter (more than most people think)
Most Google Ads accounts don’t lose money because the offer is bad. They lose money because they are paying for the wrong searches.
Negative keywords are your fastest lever to reduce junk intent. Less waste = better signals = better results.
Negative keyword match types (simple explanation)
1) Negative Broad
Blocks searches that contain all negative words (order doesn’t matter). Use this carefully—can block too much.
2) Negative Phrase
Blocks searches that contain the exact phrase in the same order. Great for patterns like: “free”, “training”, “course”, “definition”.
3) Negative Exact
Blocks only the exact search term. Best when you want precise control without blocking similar good searches.
For most accounts: Phrase + Exact wins. Broad negatives are powerful, but risky if you overdo them.
A simple weekly negative keyword process (15 minutes)
- Open Search Terms → filter last 7 days.
- Sort by spend → find expensive junk first.
- Tag patterns (jobs, free, DIY, definition, cheap, competitors, support).
- Add negatives to the right level:
- Account-level (global junk patterns)
- Campaign-level (category-specific junk)
- Ad group-level (tight control)
- Review impact next week: CPC, CTR, conversion rate, lead quality.
This is how performance compounds: small hygiene steps every week.
Negative Keyword Builder (copy-paste)
Paste search terms or keywords below. Click common junk chips to add instantly. Output will format as Exact or Phrase negatives.
Your negative keyword list will appear here.
Negative keywords — common questions
Will negative keywords reduce my traffic?
Yes — but that’s good. You’re removing low-intent traffic. Your goal is not “more clicks.” Your goal is more profitable conversions.
Where should I add negatives: account, campaign, or ad group?
Account-level for global junk (jobs, free, meaning). Campaign-level for category junk. Ad group-level when you want tight control without blocking other campaigns.
How often should I review search terms?
Weekly. If you spend aggressively or you’re in a competitive niche, review twice a week.
Does this matter for Performance Max?
PMax is more “black box,” but traffic quality still matters. Use brand exclusions, placement controls (where available), audience signals, feed hygiene, and clean conversion tracking. For Search campaigns, negatives remain a direct and powerful lever.
If you want better leads, start here
Most accounts can improve performance simply by removing junk searches. Negative keyword hygiene is boring — and that’s why it works.
Want AdShot Media to clean your traffic and rebuild for ROI?
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Generated By AdShot Media AI.