SEO Course In Multan-Part -02
Keyword Research & Keyword
Targeting Best Practices
The first step in search engine optimization is really to
determine what it is you’re actually optimizing for. This means identifying the
terms people are searching for (also known as “keywords”) that you want your
website to rank for in search engines like Google.
Sounds simple enough, right? I want my widget company to show
up when people look for “widgets,” and maybe when they type in things like “buy
widgets.” Onto step three!
Search volume for SEO keywords
Unfortunately it’s not quite that simple. There are a few key
factors to take into account when determining the keywords you want to target
on your site:
Search Volume – The first factor to consider is how many
people (if any) are actually searching for a given keyword. The more people
there are searching for a keyword, the bigger the audience you stand to reach.
Conversely, if no one is searching for a keyword, there is no audience
available to find your content through search.
Relevance – If a term is frequently searched for that’s
great: but what if it’s not completely relevant to your prospects? Relevance
seems straight-forward at first: if you’re selling enterprise email marketing
automation software you don’t want to show up for searches that don’t have
anything to do with your business, like “pet supplies.” But what about terms
like “email marketing software”? This might intuitively seem like a great
description of what you do, but if you’re selling to Fortune 100 companies,
most of the traffic for this very competitive term will be searchers who don’t
have any interest in buying your software (and the folks you do want to reach
might never buy your expensive, complex solution based on a simple Google
search). Conversely, you might think a tangential keyword like “best enterprise
PPC marketing solutions” is totally irrelevant to your business since you don’t
sell PPC marketing software. But if your prospect is a CMO or marketing
director, getting in front of them with a helpful resource on evaluating
pay-per-click tools could be a great “first touch” and an excellent way to
start a relationship with a prospective buyer.
Competition – As with any business opportunity, in SEO you
want to consider the potential costs and likelihood of success. For SEO, this
means understanding the relative competition (and likelihood to rank) for
specific terms.
First you need to understand who your prospective customers
are and what they’re likely to search for. If you don’t already understand who
your prospects are, thinking about that is a good place to start, for your
business in general but also for SEO.
From there you want to understand:
What types of things are they interested in?
What problems do they have?
What type of language do they use to describe the things that
they do, the tools that they use, etc.?
Who else are they buying things from (this means your
competitors, but also could mean tangential, related tools – for the email
marketing company, think other enterprise marketing tools)?
Once you’ve answered these questions, you’ll have an initial
“seed list” of possible keywords and domains to help you get additional keyword
ideas and to put some search volume and competition metrics around.
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You can find a more comprehensive list of keyword tools
below, but the main idea is that in this initial step, you’ll want to run a
number of searches with a variety of different keyword tools. You can also use
competitive keyword tools like SEM Rush to see what terms your competitors are
ranking for. These tools look at thousands of different search results, and
will show you each search term they’ve seen your competitor ranking in Google
for lately. Here’s what SEM Rush shows for marketing automation provider Market:
SEMRush Keyword Data
Again: this doesn’t just have to be something you look at for
competitors. You could look at related tools that are selling to the same
market for content ideas, and even look at the major niche publishers who talk
about your topic (and that your prospects are reading) and see what kinds of
keywords those sites are driving traffic for.
Additionally, if you have an existing site, you’re likely
getting some traffic from search engines already. If that’s the case, you can
use some of your own keyword data to help you understand which terms are
driving traffic (and which you might be able to rank a bit better for).
Unfortunately, Google has stopped delivering a lot of the
information about what people are searching for to analytics providers, but you
can use SEM Rush (or similar tools, such as SpyFu) on your own site to get a
sense of the terms you’re ranking for and their estimated search volume. Google
also makes a bit more of this data available in their free Webmaster Tools
interface (if you haven’t set up an account, this is a very valuable SEO tool
both for unearthing search query data and for diagnosing various technical SEO
issues – more on Webmaster Tools set up here).
Once Webmaster Tools is set up, you can navigate to this link
when logged in and see the search queries that are driving traffic to your
site:
These could be good terms to focus additional content
promotion and internal linking around (more on each of those topics later), and
could also be great “seed keywords” to help you get more great ideas about what
to target.
Once you’ve taken the time to understand how your prospects
talk and what they search for, have looked at the keywords driving traffic to
your competitors and related sites, and have looked at the terms driving
traffic to your own site, you need to work to understand which terms you can
conceivably rank for and where the best opportunities actually lie.
Determining the relative competition of a keyword can be a
fairly complex task. At a very high level, you need to understand:
How trusted and authoritative (in other words: how many links
does the whole site get, and how high quality, trusted, and relevant are those
linking sites?) other entire sites that will be competing to rank for the same
term are
How well aligned they are with the keyword itself (do they
offer a great answer to that searcher’s question)
How popular and authoritative each individual page in that
search result is (in other words: how many links does the page itself have, and
how high quality, trusted, and relevant are those linking sites?
You can dive deeper into the process of determining how
competitive keywords are in Back link's in-depth guide or by using Word Stream
founder Larry Kim’s competitive index formula (tip number 3).
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