A merchant will never be second-priced against itself in the auction for any offer, irrespective of the number, or identity, of the CSSs used by the merchant. Therefore, if two CSSs place bids on behalf of the same merchant, the winning offer and the price paid by the winning CSS will be the same as if those bids had been placed by the same CSS.
The fact that several CSSs place ads on your behalf won't mean that your offers are being repeated or that Google will charge more for a click on any of them.
Example: CSS A bids 30 pence per click to place your offer. For simplicity, we'll assume that all ads have the same quality and relevance.
Scenario 1: The next highest CSS bid is 20 pence on behalf of a different merchant. Your offer will win the auction at a cost of 20 pence – only as much as necessary to maintain the position.
Offers uploaded through |
Merchant |
Bid placed by CSS |
Price paid by winning CSS if their ad is clicked |
CSS A |
Merchant 1 (you) |
30 |
20 |
CSS A |
Merchant 2 |
20 |
– |
CSS A |
Merchant 3 |
15 |
– |
CSS A |
Merchant 4 |
12 |
– |
Scenario 2: Now assume that another CSS starts advertising on your behalf and bids 25 pence. You still win the auction with the 30 pence bid that CSS A made on your behalf, but the next closest competitor now bids 25 pence. Since this competitor is a CSS who's also bidding on your behalf, we do not use that second bid to determine the price that CSS A pays. Instead, we find the next highest bid that's been placed for a different merchant, which is still 20 pence. The CPC paid for the winning bid does not change and remains at 20 pence.
Offers uploaded through |
Merchant |
Bid placed by CSS |
Price paid by winning CSS if their ad is clicked |
CSS A |
Merchant 1 (you) |
30 |
20 |
CSS B |
Merchant 1 (you) |
25 |
– |
CSS A |
Merchant 2 |
20 |
– |
CSS A |
Merchant 3 |
15 |
– |
Scenario 3: Now assume, instead, that the bid placed on your behalf by CSS B is higher than the bid placed by CSS A on your behalf. In this case, CSS B will win the auction. The next highest bid is the 30 pence bid that CSS A placed, also on your behalf. Since both bids are for the same merchant, we do not use CSS A's bid to determine the price of the click that CSS B pays. Instead, we use the next highest bid for a different merchant, which is still 20 pence. The CPC paid by CSS B for your product will be 20 pence.
Offers uploaded through |
Merchant |
Bid placed by CSS |
Price paid by winning CSS if their ad is clicked |
CSS B |
Merchant 1 (you) |
40 |
20 |
CSS A |
Merchant 1 (you) |
30 |
– |
CSS A |
Merchant 2 |
20 |
– |
CSS A |
Merchant 3 |
15 |
– |