Specific customs exceptions allow you to segregate different error types for your catch statements. The common construct for exception handling is this:

    try
    {}
    catch (Exception ex)
    {}

This catches *all* exceptions regardless of type. However, if you have custom exceptions, you can have separate handlers for each type:

    try
    {}
    catch (CustomException1 ex1)
    {
        //handle CustomException1 type errors here
    }
    catch (CustomException2 ex2)
    {
        //handle CustomException2 type errors here
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        //handle all other types of exceptions here
    }

Ergo, specific exceptions allow you a finer level of control over your exception handling. This benefit is shared not only by custom exceptions, but all other exception types in the .NET system libraries as well.