How to Begin Keyword Research
What is a keyword?
It's anything people type into a search engine. It could be made up
of one word or several keyword phrases joined together. Every person
uses their own method of searching, and that makes anticipating
those keywords that will connect their websites with the right
visitors very difficult. Keyword research starts with the
understanding that finding lots of related keywords that deliver
targeted traffic is the ultimate goal of any keyword research.
Sending thousands of visitors to a site who have no interest
in your product, let alone in buying it, is just wasted effort and
doesn't do any good for your business. If possible, we want to find
the customer who has a clear knowledge of what they want and is
close to buying something soon. We would
ideally want a few visitors who are seriously looking to buy in the
near future. In order to achieve this, we want to find the least
competitive keywords with the highest number of searches that are
the most relevant to our website. If you
are just starting out, it definitely would be to your advantage to
target lower competition terms. Having success with low competition
terms will lead to increased confidence to target more competitive
terms with higher search volumes.
Thinking like
your customers
Thinking like your customers is easier said than done.
All merchants are guilty of thinking in terms of features and
specs of the products and not thinking in terms of benefits it can
provide to the customers. You know your
business and market too well. The industry jargons and slang are in
your every day language. No wonder when you start your keyword
research you have a very narrow keyword focus. You become your own
worst enemy in exploring other ideas. Here
is an example: what is the most popular search term, "cheap
flights," "cheap seats," "low fares" or "discount fares"?
As you can see it's not that simple to pick the best keywords, is
it?
The hardest part of keyword research is to keep an open mind about
all possible search methods people might use to look for the same
thing. Keyword research is part science, part intuition, and
imagination. Since we can't get into the heads of every possible
potential visitor to your site who may be interested in your
products or services, we have to rely on keyword research tools to
tell us what people actually search for and how often.
There are a handful of very powerful keyword research tools that are
worth using, but the amount of information you can mine from them is
mind boggling. Another great resource for
proven keywords is to look at your competitor's website. We are
talking about finding the highest ranking competitors on the search
engines using your target keywords. Once you find the top 5-10
competitor sites, perform a quick review of their keywords on the
web pages. This can be a lengthy and slow
process, but luckily there are free Keyword Analyzer tools that can
dig up keywords from your competitor's sites in a snap. We'll cover
in detail how the Keyword Analyzer can be used to add hundreds of
keywords to your keyword research project.
Keyword research is like a job interview
process
In order to find the right candidate you may need to interview
hundreds of applicants to find the perfect fit for the job. Well,
the keyword research process is very similar; you have to cast a
widenet first to capture all the possible combinations of keywords
known to man. Even then, it's almost guaranteed you will discover
new keywords you have missed in the original research only a few
weeks earlier. What this tells us is the keyword selection and
refinement process never ends, or at least it should not end until
you are happy with the number of visitors you are receiving to your
site.
Where and how to look for keywords
In order to find the best keywords for our website we need to gather
information from a variety of resources. Some of these resources may
include:
Brainstorming: Getting your brain to go on a magic carpet ride is
one of the best ways to find relevant keywords for your website.
Don't just settle for asking the obvious question, what does my
website sell? Ask questions such as: "What is this product made up
of?" or "Who is using my services?" or "What problems do my products
solve?"
Finding the main and secondary keyword phrases should take less than
a month for even 2 or 3 websites. This does not mean your keyword
research has ended forever, but finding the 4-5 word long secondary
key phrases can be done with the free keyword research tools if your
budget is tight.
Free keyword research tools: You can gain access to the powerful and
free Google external keyword tool to expand your keyword list.
Unfortunately the Google external keyword tool only gives a search
volume indicator instead of the actual search numbers. Another very
valuable feature in Google external keyword tool is the
"Site-Related Keywords" finder. By simply entering the website URL
of your competitors, you can find out in seconds which keywords they
target on their web pages.
Another free keyword research tool available without creating an
account is the Overture keyword inventory . As of now, August 2007,
this tool only shows the January 2007 search volumes as it's being
phased out, but Yahoo! is promising a replacement. If you have a
Yahoo! Search Marketing account you can still gain access to their
keyword tool albeit without the search volume numbers.
Related search terms suggestion tools: One of the fastest ways you
can find hundreds of related keywords is to use online lexical or
thesaurus tools.
Creating a large initial keyword list that includes a large number
of synonyms and acronyms is essential to effective keyword research.
Discovering related phrases that are not simply stemming from the
original keyword term is a cornerstone of semantic latent indexing .
Semantic indexing can be described as the grouping of related
documents based on not only direct relationship between words, but
the meaning of the words as well.
Some of the search engines provide a related search command list in
their search results. Try Clusty by entering a search command and
take a look at the "clusters" side bar. You can get dozens of ideas
from the keyword clusters by playing with different combination of
keywords. You can also visit Technorati a well known blog aggregator
and social media tagging site to help unlocked your brain and
generate new keywords. Enter a search term and observe the "Related
tags" section directly under the search results.
Visitor statistic reports: These can be generated from web server
log files or from script based visitor statistic programs. This can
help you uncover new keywords for your website by discovering what
the visitors are typing into the search engines to find your
websites. In some cases, you'll find keywords you didn't expect to
come up for in the search results. You should further research those
keywords and uncover new keyword niches.
Site search engines: This can be a great source of new keywords and
a potential data mining source. As well as further analysis of the
average number of keywords, keyword length and other important
keyword metrics.
Top ranking competitors: These websites are already well optimized
and contain keyword rich web pages. Why not leverage their efforts
and harvest the best keywords for your own website? With the help of
the SEO Studio keyword analyzer you can extract hundreds of keywords
from their META keywords and HTML page content in seconds.
A few examples of good keyword selection
practices
Selecting the best keyword takes experience and a little know how,
but it's always helpful to see how the pros do it, so here are a few
basic steps for keyword selection.
Using your favorite keyword research tool Wordtracker, Keyword
Discovery or the Keywords Analyzer, type in the main keyword phrase.
Start with the broadest possible search terms, this way there is
less chance of missing keywords that might otherwise be overlooked.
Look for 2-4 word key phrases that have at least a daily search
volume of 200 or more. Since the top 3 sites will receive 60 of all
searches, it follows you can expect at least 120 or more unique
visitors for those keywords phrases. In some cases, you may want to
lower the minimum search volume threshold to as low as 50 if the
search term is well targeted for your business.
At this point you should have at least 20-30 really good secondary
keywords in your basket.
Hopefully most of the keywords you have selected will have little
competition. Some of the keyword tools we have recommended will also
tell you the amount of competition for each keyword, but you can
also verify these numbers manually by typing the search terms into
the search engines with quotes.
It's very important that you use quotes around the keywords to let
the engines know you are looking for an exact match. The rule of
thumb we use to assess keyword competitiveness is around "100,000"
websites. Anything above a hundred thousand results is fairly
competitive and requires a fair amount of optimization and link
building. |