Wednesday, November 26, 2008

How To Get Golden Keywords for Marketing Research

By Brian Armstrong

Finding keyword phrases that will help you get traffic is one of the primary ways webmasters make money on the internet. If you target keywords that are too competitive, you'll be spending a lot of time with very little to show for it. If you can find keyword phrases that have little competition or that will require less work to achieve a top ranking in the search engines, you'll be able to get traffic to your website.

Start your research by brainstorming a list of keyword phrases that match what your website will be about or what you believe people are searching for when you want them to find your website. I've found that using a spreadsheet is the best way to keep track of your keywords. If you don't currently own Microsoft Office, you can use Google Docs or OpenOffice.

From the more broad keyword phrases, you'll be able to take more specific keyword phrases that indicate individuals being more apt to take action or buy products or services from you. For instance, someone that searches for "mp3 players" isn't as ready to actually buy an mp3 player versus someone who searches for "32GB iPod Touch 2nd Gen". Now, when you end up reviewing the competition for these keywords, there are millions of pages using the keyword phrases "mp3 players" but only a few thousand pages that use "32GB iPod Touch 2nd Gen".

With any of these keyword phrases that you've found, you'll need to determine how many monthly searches are done so you know which of these keyword phrases will be worth going for. Two great tools for doing this are the Google Adwords keyword tool and the free keyword tool at freekeywords.wordtracker.com.

Once you know how many monthly searches there are for your keywords, you need to know which of those keyword phrases have the most competition and the least competition of course. When you can identify keyword phrases that get a good amount of searches with very little competition, you'll have keywords that you can use to get some good results.

There are a few ways to narrow the competition to determine which keyword phrases are the best. The tools I use are the advanced search features available through Google. I use the allintitle, the allinanchor, and the search with the keyword phrase in quotes. People don't typically search that way, but remember that you are collecting data and not trying to mimic the search patterns of 99% of internet users.

In order to decide which keyword phrases to use, start with keyword phrases that have a minimum of 100 searches per day or 3000 searches per month. Of course, if you are very specialized, you may go for less than 100 searches per day. It all depends on what you want for your business. As far as competition, target keyword phrases that have less than 10,000 allintitle results. The lower you can get on this number, the easier it will be to rank high on the search engines.

Finding keywords is just the start. Once you have your keyword phrases, you'll need to place those strategically in your web pages including in the page title, h1 tags, and within the content of the page itself. Ideally, you'll have about a 3-5% keyword density. What this means is that you'll use your 2-3 word keyword phrase about 1-2 times for every 100 words. If you have a few paragraphs in your blog post or your web page, plan on about 1 keyword phrase per paragraph. If you use those keyword phrases in the right way, you'll be on your way to getting those top rankings.

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