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Post by anamika371 on Jan 14, 2024 13:08:58 GMT 9
Traditionally, a phrase match keyword matches to queries that include the entirety of order. For example, the phrase match keyword “dog day care” is eligible to match to queries like “boston dog day care” and “dog day care costs.” Traditionally, a broad match modifier keyword matches to queries that include each term specified in the keyword in any order. For example, the broad match modifier keyword +dog +day +care Email Marketing List is eligible to match to queries like “day care for my dog” and “take care of my dog during the day.” Up until now, phrase match and broad match modifier keywords have been eligible to show for close variant queries like accidental plurals and misspellings. Now, like exact match keywords, they’ll also be eligible to show for same-meaning close variants like synonyms and paraphrases. Google provided an example for each match type in their blog post. , which illustrates the changes coming to broad match modifier: phrase-match-broad-match-modifier-close-variants-example-queries And here’s the phrase match example: phrase-match-broad-match-modifier-close-variants-example-queries.
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