@James Grasty Increasing your CTR through quality ad copy that has strong keywords in the titles, headlines, descriptions, etc. Quality Landing Page that has strong keywords throughout the page. Overall just the regular best practices that you would constantly try to A/B test in improve normally with your ads. This is why I stopped focusing so much on it. Because if I just focused on what was already going to improve my ads and landing pages to improve my conversion rates, ROAS, CPA etc it should naturally improve these scores too. For context in the past, I've had quality score ranks on keywords be very low even though my click through rate was extremely high. The relevancy was extremely high. The website was extremely relevant, but Google will still give me a low rating. I tried to test ad copy and all sorts of things to improve it and nothing seemed to really improve it. When it did improve, it took weeks or months to notice. Sometimes my best performing keywords were some of my lowest quality scored keywords. I realize I couldn't really change Googles mind on this very easily so I focus more on just doing what would improve my actual core KPIs. I realize it was silly to try to pause out low quality score keywords at times or focus on ad copy because my results were not very reflective of Google scores most of the time. For example, I also don't use the full amount of titles and descriptions often because I want to limit the number of potential variations its testing (faster results). Google will rank these ads of poor quality because I'm not filling them out completely but the results from these "poor" ads often outperform my excellent rated ads that are filled out completetly. So I just don't care where Google says. Results always are the best metric to pay attention to.