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Keyword Selection Made (Somewhat) Easy

Following up on the last post, Basic Keyword Structure, today I am going to show you how to make your keyword selections.

Keyword Selection Made (Somewhat) Easy

Let's say your chosen niche is dog training. What do you think your main, or Tier 1, keyword ought to be? That's right–dog training!

Odds are, however, that it will take you until the end of time to rank on the first page of Google for that term. However, there are many keyword variations on "dog training" that you can rank for. Today, I will show you how to find them.

Remember, the basic premise of my web philosophy is that content is King. This isn't about micro niches, either (more on that in a subsequent post). Rather, what we are talking about here is building out an authority site that serves to provide your visitors and customers with loads of content they crave.

Here's a really simple (and I mean really simple) way to get all the keywords you could EVER want.

Each of the keywords we find in the following exercise will be a future post or page for our site. They are long-tail keywords, too, so they will rank quite easily with enough backlinking juice.

So, here goes. Fire up Google's "External Keyword Tool," found here — http://u-like.us/keyword (a new window or tab should open up).

dog training google keyword tool

Type "dog training" (without the quotes) in the Word or Phrase box, check the box "Only show ideas closely related to my search terms," and click the Search button.

Your results will be the top-searched keywords that contain the term, dog training. I suggest you click on the Download button and save these results as a CSV file that you can open in a spreadsheet program later.

Any of these keywords could be your Tier 2 keywords. Pick 4 or 5 of these that make sense for your website.

Finding Tier 3 Keywords

Now, here's the cool part. Un-check the "Only show ideas closely related to my search terms" and run the search again. Note that the results are different. These are the LSI keywords we talked about in Basic Keyword Structure. Save those results, too.

Now you have 200 keywords that you can use to write posts or pages.

Finally, here's a bonus keyword tool that is not widely popular, and I have no idea why. It's called the Wonder Wheel and here's how you find it.

Open a new browser window or tab and navigate to Google. Do a search using "dog training" (without the quotes). Now, on the left-hand side of the results, you should see a menu bar with an "All Results" listing. Underneath that, there is the Wonder Wheel. It looks like this:

Google Wonder Wheel

Click it and you will arrive at a page that looks like this:

Google Dog Training Wonder Wheel Results

Now, this is cool! Click on any of those terms and the Wonder wheel spawns all sorts of keywords directly related to the term!

You will never run out of things to write about again (or to send to your outsource partner) and you should easily be able to rank quite well and quite quickly for them.

Basic Keyword Structure

Basic Keyword StructureA while back, in Keywords Introduction, we talked about choosing keywords for your website. This post is a reiteration, or reinforcement, of that conversation, with a little more depth to the discussion. Here we will talk about basic keyword structure.

In an ideal world, you would begin your website with a clean slate. In fact, you would start with a blank sheet of paper and before you did anything with your website, you'd plan out your entire strategy for building out your website.

The most important part of your plan is your keywords. That is far more important than your website look and feel, your offpage SEO, and your social marketing.
 

Content Is King

We have all heard this one before: Content is king. Google loves content and rewards websites that offer loads of content to its users. Essentially, if you make it easy for Google to love your site, it will. Give the Google what it wants (content) and you're golden.

Where does all this content come from? You write it (or have it written for you, via outsourcing)! But where to start?

That's where the planning and preparation comes in from above. You have to choose your keywords and keyword phrases (KW and KWP, respectively).

Even if you are not starting from scratch, you can follow this plan!

Basic Keyword Structure

Here's the way I suggest you plan out your keyword strategy.

Pick a KW or KWP that makes sense for your industry or niche. If you sell plumbing, your website's main KW ought to be "plumbing." Makes sense, right?

Then think in tiers.

Tier 1 Keyword is your main keyword. It is, after you have built up dozens or hundreds of pages, the keyword you want to rank #1 for at Google. To get there for very competitive keywords like "plumber," you will have to write loads of content, get hundreds if not thousands of backlinks, and promote your site all over the place (far beyond the scope of this post).

But, with diligence, you can get there in most cases.

However, in the interim, you have Tier 2 and Tier 3 keywords you can target right away. These are "long-tail keywords" that are highly related to your Tier 1 keyword.

They are also known as Latent Semantic Indexing keywords, or LSI keywords. You can read more about LSI here (Wikipedia) and here (Exactly What Are LSI Keywords Anyway?) The first, by the way, is the "scientific" explanation; the second is one mere mortals can understand–I'd go with the second one

Using our example of "plumber" your Tier 2 keyword may be "Pleasanton plumber" and your Tier 3 keyword may be "Plumbers serving Pleasanton".

Essentially, your Tier 3 keyword links back to your Tier 2 keyword, which links back to your Tier 1 keyword. Or, put another way,

"All roads lead back to your Tier 1 keyword."

Keyword Plan

Start with the Tier 1 page. Write one page of content where you focus solely on the Tier 1 keyword. That is your home page. Then build 4-5 Tier 2 keyword pages, all linking back to your Tier 1 page. These could be buttons on your home page or categories if your site is based on WordPress.

Finally, begin writing all of your longtail keyword pages. Link each one back to a single Tier 2 page.

You cannot do it all at once. Start with 1 or 2 long-tail keywords (Tier 3) for each Tier 2 page. Each time you publish one of these Tier 3 pages, promote it.

How? There are various strategies, like content syndication, tweeting about them, mentioning them on your Facebook profile page and/or fanpage, or by doing some blog commenting for backlinks. See Two Dozen Ways to Get Backlinks and How To Get Dozens of High Quality Backlinks From a Single Blog Post for more ideas.

In any event, you want to send some backlinks to these Tier 3 pages. These are the easiest keywords and pages to rank for and this is where you should start your web promotion efforts.

Conclusion

Obviously, choosing the right keywords to target in your own website is of paramount importance. I have given you plenty of food for thought in this regard, along with some concrete examples and action plans.

Keywords Introduction

This should be a "sticky" post because choosing and using keywords is so important. In fact, choose the wrong keywords for your business and your business may as well close.

I'm serious. Keywords matter. BIG TIME!

Even for you "offline" businesses. Imagine building a store full of sporting goods and you call it "The Shack." Wouldn't it be better to call it "The Sporting Goods Store?"

Right.

At the outset of any venture, you MUST do your keyword research. It's vital. So this post is about keywords: Their importance, how to research them, and how to use them.

Why Are Keywords Important?

Keywords are the foundation upon which you build your entire business, whether it's an online business or a brick and mortar store. Keywords are what the entire web is about: How search engines index and rank your website, how you construct ads, how people search, and how you find what you are looking for online.

Keywords can be–and are–single words or multiple word phrases. You may have heard of "long-tail" keywords; these are nothing more than 3 or more keywords in a phrase.

Generally speaking, I call keywords keyword phrases, simply because this term is all-encompassing; a phrase is simply one word or more strung together with some semblance of meaning or order. So that's the definition we'll adhere to here. I will abbreviate the term keyword phrase with the acronym KWP, or KWPs for keyword phrases (plural).

When you're setting up your online presence, you need to think like your potential customers, or prospects. How would they search for your products or services if they didn't know your website address (URL)? How likely would it be that your site appeared in the search engine results pages (SERPs)?

If your website didn't appear in the list of search results, how would anybody find you online?


Did you know that over half of all the people who search for any given keyword phrase winds up on the first 2 sites listed?


Obviously, you can create the best website on the planet, but if nobody finds it (and they find it predominantly through using search engines and to a lesser degree through advertisements and other links), it may as well not exist.

Therefore, wisely choosing your KWPs is vitally important.

Keyword Research

You have some idea of what your business does. If it's a sporting goods store, one of your KWPs should be sporting goods. In fact, it may be your main keyword (more on that in a bit).

No big secret there. But there are literally thousands of other keywords that you could target that offer more qualified (i.e., targeted) buyers along with less competition (meaning your website will appear higher up in the SERPs).

There are various keyword research tools that are available; some are free while others cost money. I will first share with you the "mother of all keyword research tools," Google. Yes, that's right. It's not a keyword-specific tool, but it is the best thing you can use to do some cursory research to find out if you're even in the ballpark with respect to your keyword phrase research.

Google is the most dominant and most used search engine in the world. They have the data that you need to figure out what your keywords ought to be. In fact, most of the keyword research tools that are available for purchase actually use Google's data!

Pick a keyword phrase that you think people may use to find what you sell. Again, using sporting goods as the KWP, a person looking for what you sell (sporting goods) may search Google using the term, "sporting goods store." They don't want to learn about sporting goods; they want to buy sporting goods (that's another KWP, by the way, that you might want to look into).

Therefore, you may want to enter that KWP into the search box in Google.

You'll find (as of this writing) that there are nearly 25 million results in Google for the KWP sporting goods store. This means that Google has indexed and ranked 25 million web pages that they think is a good match for the KWP. Look at some of the results: Big-name sporting goods stores.

You may surmise, if you're a small time operator or just starting out in the business, that it will take a lot of time, money, and effort to appear on the first page of search results for this particular KWP.

But one thing you know for sure is that this is a valuable KWP. Otherwise, there wouldn't be so many companies vying for #1.

Of course, there's a better mousetrap than just using good old Google. In fact, Google has made KWP research a much more straightforward operation than it used to be.


Enter the FREE Google Keyword Tool!

==> http://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal


Go ahead, click the link. Enter your KWP (in this case, sporting goods store) and check the box that says, "Only show ideas closely related to my search terms."

Google returns, from their live search results database, the 100 KWPs that most closely match your KWP along with monthly searches, competition, and trends. There's a lot of valuable data in those three metrics. Evaluate it. Get a sense of which KWP make sense for your website.

Of course, there is a plethora of keyword research tools available, some free, some you have to pay for. Market Samurai is one of my favorites. It piggybacks off not only Google but Bing and Yahoo and brings you a ton of valuable information all in a one-stop KWP tool.

I highly recommend Market Samurai.

You can find more on keyword research here.

Keyword Methodology

I suggest that you pick a primary KWP and base your home page on it. Then, all of your other pages (or posts if it's a blog) can target KWPs that are either related or variants on your primary KWP.

For example, use sporting goods as your primary KWP. Then, one of your pages or posts, linked to from your home page, can be based on the KWP sporting goods store (a variant) as well as athletic equipment (related), and of course, many other KWPs to round out the content of your website.

This second tier of KWP, which are either variants of or related to your primary KWP, are going to generate, over time, some good traffic. In fact, many of these long-tail keyword phrases (LTKWP) will generate more traffic than your homepage.

Start out with your primary KWP along with 10-15 or 20 of these secondary KWPs. Build your site around them. Here's how.

How to Use Keywords in Your Webpages

Obviously, your homepage should be geared around your primary KWP. For a static site, your homepage is also named as index.html (or index.htm). Make sure that your meta description and keywords entries contain your primary KWP. Your meta keywords should contain your primary KWP and perhaps 3-4 related KWPs.

For a blog, you can even name your post with your primary KWP and set it as your home page. Alternatively, you can set your homepage default values (meta description, keywords, title) to contain your primary KWP right from within your blog admin interface (I highly recommend the free WP plugin called "All-in-One SEO Pack" to make this task super simple).

Sprinkle (naturally, of course–no keyword "stuffing") your primary KWP throughout your home page. There are no hard-and-fast rules about this, but I'd try to use your primary KWP in your title, H1 tag, a few times in the body of the text, and of course in your meta tags.

Your secondary KWPs are your inputs for all of your other pages. That is, author each of your other webpages focusing on only one of your secondary KWPs. Follow the same guidelines as above for your homepage.

If your site is blog-based, make sure that your categories make sense and tag each of your posts with a tag that matches your KWP.

It's very important that you keep a list of your KWPs. You should use this list to build webpages or posts so that you can continually add to your website. Not only that–use this KWP list to write articles and posts on other websites (as a guest blogger, perhaps) that generate direct traffic and that also give you backlinks to your site.

A Simple Formula for Keyword Research

Keyword research ought to be one of the first things you do when setting up an online business. Heck, it's one of the first things you should do when setting up any business nowadays. Even if you don't have a website of your own, your business should be online (think Google Places, Yelp, Amazon, eBay, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook, to name just a few).
 
Even if none of the above matters to you, keyword research still matters because you want to mould your marketing message and all marketing materials with the keywords that will pre-sell your products and services.
 
Having said that, once many folks convince themselves that they need to do KW research, they ultimately fail by either doing it wrong or waiting for the perfect set of keywords.
 
You may have heard this term before: Analysis Paralysis.
 
You get so caught up in the data, go on tangents, analyze using multiple tools, all of which give you conflicting information.
 
Below is a link to a pdf I picked up from a friend in the industry, written by two pretty smart guys. In it, they show you how they do keyword research. It's a simple formula. You should check it out. You may find that it's perfectly suited to you and your situation.
 

How to Find Profitable Keywords

I ran across this video from Erica Douglass of Erica.biz. It's a neat little video tutorial on how to find profitable keywords to use for blog posts that get free Google search engine traffic to your site. It's pretty nifty.

How to Find Profitable Keywords

I like how she spells everything out. It's really all about finding longtail keywords that don't have a lot of competition but that do have a good number of searches per month. The key is finding those keyword phrases that people use when they're in a buying frame of mind. That is to say, this is a method on how to find profitable keywords that people use when they're searching for solutions to problems.

The video below explains it all.