How Better Keyword Research Gets You Better Results
Keywords and SEO are directly connected
when it comes to running a winning search marketing campaign. Because keywords
are foundational for all your other SEO efforts, it's well worth the time and
investment to ensure your SEO keywords are highly relevant to your audience and
effectively organized for action.
Keyword Data You Can Act On - Instead of just a list of
keywords, our tools give your structured, actionable data, ready to use in
search marketing campaigns. For example, you can drop a list of keywords into
the Keyword Grouper to get back an organized set of
relevant keyword niches.
When optimizing your web pages, keep in
mind that keyword relevance is more important than keyword
density in SEO.
SEO keywords are the key words and
phrases in your web content that make it possible for people to find your site
via search engines. A website that is well optimized for search engines
"speaks the same language" as its potential visitor base with
keywords for SEO that help connect searchers to your site. Keywords are one of
the main elements of SEO. In
other words, you need to know how people are looking for the products, services
or information that you offer, in order to make it easy for them to find you—otherwise,
they'll land on one of the many other pages in the Google results. Implementing
keyword SEO will help your site rank above your competitors.
This is why developing a list of keywords
is one of the first and most important steps in any search engine
optimization initiative.
Finding Your Best Keywords for SEO
Most beginning search marketers make the
same mistakes when it comes to SEO keyword research: Only doing SEO keyword research once, Not
bothering to update and expand their SEO keyword list, or Targeting
keywords that are too popular, meaning they’re way too competitive.
Basically, SEO keyword research should
be an ongoing and ever-evolving part of your job as a marketer. Old keywords
need to be reevaluated periodically, and high-volume, competitive keywords (or
“head” keywords, as opposed to long-tailed
keywords) can often be usefully
replaced or augmented with longer, more specific phrases designed not to bring
in just any visitor but exactly the right visitors. (Who
visits your site – particularly if they’re people who are actively looking for
your services – is at least as important as how many people visit.)
And you’ve got to diversify. Here’s a
tongue-twister that’s absolutely true: diversity is a key word in the keyword
world. You’re not going to stand out if you find yourself using all of the same
keywords as your competitors. Not only should you try new keyword search tools and keep track of the results, but
you should feel free to experiment based on your own research – who else uses
your keywords? And how do you make yourself stand out? By providing great content that truly answers the questions
your prospective customers are asking with their keyword searches.
Using Our Free SEO Keyword Tools
WordStream's free SEO
keyword research tools that
help you find your best, most relevant keywords—keywords that will drive ongoing web
traffic and conversions on your site.
Benefits of using WordStream’s keyword
tools, including the Free Keyword Tool, for better SEO include: More
SEO Keywords – Get FREE access to thousands of keywords plus keyword search volume data, mailed right to
your inbox.
· Targeted
SEO Keywords - Filter your keyword results by industry or country so you
can focus on the keywords that will really work for your account.
WordStream’s keyword toolset is also
hugely valuable for PPC marketing – use the Keyword Niche Finder to identify
new ad groups for your AdWords campaigns, and use the free Negative Keyword
Tool to find negative keywords that will reduce wasteful clicks and save you
money.
Making Your SEO Keywords Work for You
Now that you’ve found the best keywords,
you need to put them to work in order to get SEO results (search-driven
traffic, conversions, and all that good stuff).
So: how to proceed? On the one hand, SEO best
practices recommend that you include relevant keywords in a number of
high-attention areas on your site, everywhere from the titles and body text of
your pages to your URLs to your meta tags to your image file names. On the
other hand, successfully optimized websites tend to have thousands or
even millions of keywords. You can't very well craft a single, unique
page for every one of your keywords; at the same time, you can't try to cram
everything onto a handful of pages with keyword stuffing and expect to rank for
every individual keyword. It just doesn't work that way.
So how does it work? The answer is keyword grouping and organization. By dividing your keywords into small,
manageable groups of related keywords, you’ll cut down on your workload (significantly),
while still creating targeted, specific pages.
For example, let’s say you were running
the website of an online pet store. You might be wise to create one keyword
grouping for all your dog-related products, then one for all of your parakeet-related
projects, etc. The next step would be to segment each individual group into
smaller subgroups (parakeet cages, parakeet toys, parakeet snacks) and then
even smaller groups for each type of product (low-fat parakeet snacks, luxury
parakeet snacks… you get the idea). Now your pet store can create individual
pages optimized for each small keyword group.
A marketer attempting to optimize a web
page for the "gourmet parakeet snacks" keyword group should consider
doing most if not all of the following:
· Using
the keyword in the title of the page
· Using
the keyword in the URL (e.g., online-petstore.com/parakeets/snacks/gourmet)
· Using
the keyword, and variations (e.g., "gourmet parakeet snacks"),
throughout the page copy
· Using
the keyword in the meta tags, especially the meta description
· Using
the keyword in any image file paths and in the images' alt text
· Using
the keyword as the anchor text in links back to the page from
elsewhere on the site
Manual keyword grouping can be very
time-consuming, of course. Some of our own tools, which may prove helpful in a
pinch, include our Keyword Niche Finder, which works just like a
regular SEO keyword tool, but returns you suggestions pre-grouped into relevant
clusters. We also provide a Keyword Grouper, which groups preexisting
lists automatically.