Content created by Gourmet Marketing, a full-service hotel marketing agency focused on driving hotel growth and direct bookings with marketing strategies designed for today’s competitive landscape.
Most PPC strategies are built around one goal: reaching new audiences. Cast wide, drive traffic, and build awareness. That logic makes sense at the top of the funnel, but it leaves a critical gap lower down.
Some of the highest-value traffic you will ever generate is already searching for your brand. These users know who you are. They are actively evaluating you. In many cases, they are one click away from converting.
And yet, branded keywords are routinely left out of paid search strategy entirely.
That gap is not just inefficient. It is expensive. Leaving branded search out of your PPC campaign means surrendering control at the exact moment a decision is being made.
It is easy to assume that ranking first organically for your brand name is enough. In reality, the search engine results page (SERP) is a shared environment, and not everyone on it is working in your favor.
A single branded search can surface competitor ads, third-party comparison platforms, affiliate sites, and review pages that are not designed to convert users toward you. Even when your organic listing appears at the top, it is competing for attention with everything around it.
This dynamic is especially visible in hospitality and travel. A guest searches your hotel by name and is immediately presented with OTA listings, booking platform ads, and comparison widgets, all before they reach your direct booking page. The decision starts forming before they even click.
A branded PPC campaign allows you to take back meaningful control over that moment. It ensures your brand is not just present in the SERP, but positioned with intention, a clear message, and a direct path to conversion.
Not all paid search traffic carries the same weight, and the data reflects this clearly.
Branded keywords typically generate significantly lower cost-per-click (CPC) than non-branded terms, often by 50% or more, because Quality Score rewards high relevance and strong expected click-through rate (CTR). When the search query matches your brand name and your ad reflects that precisely, Google's ad auction works in your favor.
Beyond CPC efficiency, branded paid search tends to produce:
You are not trying to generate interest. You are helping someone complete a decision they have already started. That is where paid search delivers its best return.
Many businesses assume their brand name is off-limits in paid search. It is not.
Competitor conquest bidding, where a business targets another brand's name as a keyword, is a common and legitimate tactic. Competitors can and do position themselves directly in front of your audience at the precise moment someone is searching for you. They use that moment to introduce doubt, promote alternatives, or highlight price advantages.
Without a branded layer in your PPC strategy, you leave that space completely open. Common competitor tactics at the branded search stage include:
With a branded paid search campaign running, you stay visible above or alongside competitor activity, reinforce the intent behind the original search, and give users a clear, direct path to you rather than to an alternative.
Driving traffic is only part of the equation. Where that traffic lands, and what it does next, determines whether the campaign actually delivers value.
Organic search does not always route users to the pages that convert best. Someone searching your brand name might land on a general homepage, a blog post, or an outdated page, none of which are optimised to move a high-intent user forward. At the point where someone is ready to act, that kind of friction can be the difference between a conversion and an exit.
This is where a branded PPC campaign earns its place beyond traffic generation.
Paid search gives you precise control over the landing experience. You choose the message, the page, and the call to action. Instead of depending on what organic search happens to surface, you route high-intent users to pages built for conversion rate optimisation (CRO), pages that reflect what they already know about you and give them a clear next step.
That level of control matters most at the branded search stage, because this is where users are not browsing, they are deciding.
There is often hesitation around whether branded paid search cannibalizes organic performance. That framing misses what is actually happening in a real user journey.
Research consistently shows that paid and organic listings work together rather than compete. When both appear for a branded query, total click volume typically increases, users do not simply substitute one for the other. The presence of a paid ad can reinforce trust and visibility, particularly on mobile SERPs where screen space is limited and organic results appear further down the page.
More broadly, a typical conversion journey is not linear. A user might first encounter your brand on social media, return later via a branded search, and choose whichever result feels most relevant in that moment. That result could be your organic listing, your paid ad, a competitor's ad, or a third-party platform.
A branded PPC campaign does not replace organic visibility. It strengthens your overall position within a journey you do not fully control.
Early-stage searches are exploratory. Users are gathering information, comparing options, and forming an initial view of the market. Branded searches are different.
When someone searches your brand name, they have already moved past exploration. They are validating, comparing, and deciding whether to move forward with you. Small details carry disproportionate weight at this stage. A clearer offer, a more direct message, or a stronger landing page experience can shift the outcome.
This is the stage where a well-structured branded PPC campaign pays for itself, not through volume, but through precision. You are showing up with the right message at the moment it has the most influence.
Including branded search in your paid strategy is not simply about adding more keywords to an existing campaign. It is about building a layer that is deliberately designed for high-intent users who already know who you are.
A strong branded PPC campaign should:
When built this way, branded paid search becomes one of the most controlled, efficient, and high-return parts of your overall search engine marketing (SEM) strategy.
Should I bid on my own brand name if I already rank first organically?
Yes. Organic rankings do not prevent competitors from running ads above your listing. Branded paid search protects that top position, allows you to control the messaging and landing experience, and typically delivers strong CTR and conversion performance at a low CPC. The cost of defending that space is almost always lower than the cost of losing conversions to a competitor who fills it.
What is branded search in PPC?
Branded search in PPC refers to paid search campaigns that target keywords containing your brand name or close variants of it. Unlike non-branded campaigns that target broad or category-level terms, branded campaigns capture users who are already specifically searching for your business — making them among the highest-intent and most cost-efficient audiences in paid search.
How much does branded PPC typically cost?
Because branded terms generate high Quality Scores (strong relevance, high expected CTR), CPCs for branded keywords are typically far lower than non-branded terms in the same account — often 50-80% lower. Combined with higher conversion rates, branded campaigns generally deliver the strongest return on ad spend of any campaign type.
When someone searches your brand name, they are not entering a neutral environment. They are stepping into a competitive SERP where multiple businesses are working to capture their attention and redirect their decision.
You can control that moment with intent, or you can leave it open.
A well-structured branded PPC campaign ensures you stay visible, protect your traffic from competitor conquest, and convert high-intent demand with precision. If that audience matters to your business, and it should, because they are your closest buyers, it is worth treating them that way.