Skip to main content
    Feed Quality

    Why Google Shows Your Products for the Wrong Searches

    You check your search terms report and find searches that make no sense. You're selling premium skincare, but appearing for "cheap face cream." Google isn't broken. It's reading your feed literally.

    9 min readJanuary 2026

    It's Not Google Being Stupid

    When products show for wrong searches, the instinct is to blame Google's algorithm. "It doesn't understand my products." "The matching is broken." "Why would it show this?"

    The uncomfortable truth: Google is doing exactly what your feed tells it to. The algorithm isn't stupid. It's literal.

    Google doesn't know what you think you're selling. It only knows what your feed data says. If that data is vague, matching expands to fill the gaps.

    This is actually good news. It means the problem is fixable. You don't need to wait for Google to "understand" your products better. You need to tell it more clearly.

    How Google Interprets Titles, Descriptions, and Attributes

    Google reads your feed hierarchically. Some fields matter more than others for query matching.

    1

    Product Title (Highest Weight)

    The title is the primary signal for query matching. Words in your title directly determine which searches trigger your products. "Blue Dress" matches very different searches than "Navy Silk Midi Dress - Occasion Wear."

    2

    Description (Medium Weight)

    Descriptions help Google understand product context and can influence matching for long-tail queries. They're secondary to titles but still read for relevance signals.

    3

    Attributes (Filtering + Matching)

    Colour, size, material, pattern, and custom attributes help narrow matching. Missing attributes force Google to infer, and inferences expand matching to potentially wrong queries.

    4

    Google Product Category

    Category tells Google what type of product you're selling and which auction pools are relevant. Wrong category means entering completely wrong auctions.

    When these signals are vague, incomplete, or contradictory, Google does its best to match anyway. "Best" usually means expanding to include more searches, not fewer.

    Real Examples You'll Recognise

    These are patterns we see in feed audits every week:

    Problem: Generic Title

    Feed title: "Black T-Shirt"

    Product: £85 premium merino wool crew neck

    Appears for: "cheap black t-shirt," "black t shirt under £10," "basic black tee"

    Fix: "Premium Merino Wool Crew Neck Sweater - Black | Luxury Knitwear"

    Problem: Missing Material

    Feed title: "Women's Summer Dress"

    Product: £180 silk occasion dress

    Appears for: "summer dress sale," "beach dress cheap," "casual summer dresses"

    Fix: "Silk Midi Dress - Wedding Guest Occasion Wear | Navy"

    Problem: Brand Without Context

    Feed title: "Nike Trainers"

    Product: £150 Nike React running shoe, men's

    Appears for: "nike trainers sale," "cheap nike shoes," "nike trainers womens" (wrong gender)

    Fix: "Nike React Infinity Run 4 - Men's Running Shoes | Black/White"

    The pattern is consistent: vague data creates broad matching. Broad matching means appearing for searches where your price, quality, or product type doesn't fit what the searcher wants.

    When Low CPC Is a Warning Sign, Not a Win

    Here's a counterintuitive truth: low CPCs often indicate a feed problem, not efficient bidding.

    The Low CPC Trap

    When your products appear for low-intent, generic searches, CPCs are low because competition is low. Nobody with premium products is bidding on "cheap t-shirt" searches. But you are, because your feed makes you look like a cheap option.

    Low CPCs with high volume and low conversion rate is the classic feed problem signature:

    • You're entering auctions where competitors with cheap products are bidding
    • The traffic expects cheap, sees your price, and bounces
    • You're paying little per click, but still wasting money on traffic that never converts

    Higher CPCs in the right auctions beat lower CPCs in wrong auctions. Paying £1.50 for clicks that convert at 3% beats paying £0.30 for clicks that convert at 0.1%.

    Early Indicators Your Feed Is the Problem

    Catch feed problems before they compound into wasted spend:

    Search Terms Report Shows Generic Queries

    If your top search terms are broad category terms ("trainers," "dress," "skincare") rather than specific product terms, your feed isn't differentiating your products.

    High Impressions, Low CTR

    Your products are showing, but people aren't clicking. This often means the visual or price doesn't match what the searcher expected based on their query.

    Price Modifiers in Search Terms

    Searches containing "cheap," "sale," "discount," or "under £X" when you're selling premium products indicate your feed isn't communicating quality level.

    Wrong Gender, Size, or Category Searches

    Appearing for "women's" when you sell men's products, or for "kids" when you sell adult sizes, indicates missing or wrong attribute data.

    The earlier you catch these signals, the less you waste. Every week spent fiddling with bids while the feed is broken is budget that could have been productive.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why do my products show for irrelevant searches on Google Shopping?

    Google matches products to searches based on your feed data, primarily titles, descriptions, and attributes. If your feed data is vague or generic, Google expands matching to include searches that seem related but aren't actually relevant to what you sell.

    How do product titles affect Google Shopping query matching?

    Product titles are the primary signal Google uses to determine search relevance. A title like 'Black T-Shirt' will match any search containing those words, while 'Premium Merino Wool Crew Neck - Midnight Black' matches more specific, higher-intent searches.

    Can I stop Google Shopping from showing my products for certain searches?

    You can add negative keywords, but this treats symptoms rather than causes. The better solution is fixing your feed data so Google naturally matches your products to the right searches. Fix the source, and the wrong matches stop.

    Related Reading

    See What Searches You're Actually Appearing For

    We'll audit your feed, compare it to your search terms report, and show you exactly where query matching is going wrong.

    Request a Feed Audit

    Get our insights in your inbox

    Plain-English thinking about Google Ads. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

    We use cookies to improve your experience. Privacy Policy