I’m watching a small but meaningful Google Search ads experiment that could change how people notice paid results. Google is testing labels that call out the ads it believes are most relevant to a user’s search query, which could affect both user trust and advertiser performance.
What’s happening. Google has started testing new Search ads labels such as “Strongest match” and “Strong match” on select ads in search results. Google Ads Liaison Ginny Marvin confirmed the experiment and said the labels are meant to help users quickly spot ads that closely match their search intent.
For now, I see this as a limited test. Google says it is only appearing for a small percentage of users in the U.S., so most advertisers may not notice it in the wild yet.
Why I care. This kind of visual signal could influence which ads users view as the most relevant and trustworthy. If Google expands the experiment, advertisers with stronger relevance and quality signals may gain more attention, while weaker or less aligned ads could become easier to ignore.
How it works. According to Google, these labels rely on the same ad quality and relevance signals already used inside its advertising systems. In other words, Google is not introducing a new ranking factor here. It is making its relevance assessment more visible directly in the Search results interface.
I see the goal as fairly straightforward: help users identify the ads most likely to answer what they were searching for, without making them interpret relevance entirely on their own.
Why Google is testing it. Google says the experiment is designed to improve the Search ads experience for both consumers and advertisers.

For users, the label could act as another cue that a paid result may be especially useful for their query.
For advertisers, it could help highly relevant ads stand out in front of high-intent audiences, which may lead to stronger engagement and higher click-through rates if the feature performs well.
Reading between the lines. I view this test as part of Google’s broader push to make ad relevance more visible and more understandable to searchers.
Historically, relevance signals have mostly worked behind the scenes through auctions, quality systems, and ranking logic. By showing those signals more clearly, Google may be trying to build more trust in sponsored results while also rewarding advertisers that closely match their ads to search intent.
The timing also matters. Search platforms are under ongoing pressure to prove that their ad experiences are useful, high quality, and worth users’ attention. A label like this gives Google another way to frame certain ads as more helpful, not just more prominent.
What I’m watching next. Google has emphasized that this is an early-stage experiment and has not said whether “Strongest match” or “Strong match” labels will become permanent. For now, I would treat this as another reminder that ad relevance, landing page quality, and alignment with user intent remain central to Google’s direction for Search advertising.
Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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