Choosing The Best Keywords To Drive Traffic To Your Website
By
Craig Broadbent,
Search Engine Optimisation Executive,
Webevents Ltd.
Harrogate, United Kingdom
craig.broadbent[at]webeventseurope.com
www.webeventseurope.com
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Getting
a website to appear in the first page of search engine
results is a common goal for most webmasters, yet few
possess the skills to actually achieve it. There are
many steps to take in order to be found for terms related
to your site, and taking your time to research the best
possible phrases for your site is an important step
on the ladder. Many
webmasters make the mistake of assuming that a ranking
for one generic term related to their site will turn
their website into a profitable success. Although
that one generic term may provide a good stream of
traffic and brand awareness, this doesn’t mean the
traffic will convert into sales or leads, and the
costs of targeting that term will tower over your
return on investment. It is best for the webmaster
to target multiple terms that not only drive traffic,
but also lead to that all important conversion.
First
of all you need to consider who your target audience
is and the purpose of your site. Do you sell products
online? Do you offer services? Is it more content
focused? There are all sorts of potential visitors
which will have varying ways of finding your site,
so understanding your audience, and the reasons they
will visit, will help focus your efforts.
With
this in mind, you can now consider those generic terms
that you think people will use to try and find your
site. It shouldn’t just be one term - a trap that
many webmasters fall into is assuming that one term
will provide enough traffic to sustain business and
are surprised that business doesn’t increase if they
do achieve that ranking. Consider all of the possible
phrases and themes of your site, even using a thesaurus
to find related terms or checking competitor websites
for ideas. It can be surprising just what terms your
potential visitors will be using!
Once
you have put together a list of short generic terms,
you can start using tools to gauge how popular and
competitive those terms are, and also refine those
generic terms to be more targeted to your site’s purpose.
The first step is to find out the popularity of terms,
which can be done using various keyword suggestion
tools.
Keyword
suggestion tools tell you which terms were typed into
searches, and how many searches were conducted on
those terms. Typing a phrase in will return a selection
of alternative phrases that contain your generic term,
alternative suggestions with a similar theme and also
an estimate of how much traffic the phrase provides
per month. These tools can be flawed as they query
different search engines and the traffic estimations
can be inaccurate, but they are still good for getting
a ball park estimation of the amount of searches conducted,
and for suggesting multiple terms you may never have
thought of targeting.
The
Overture Keyword Tool, located at inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/,
is free to use and gives you a list of suggested terms
as well as the amount of searches conducted on the
Yahoo! Search Marketing network during the last month
(Yahoo! Bought Overture and rebranded it Yahoo! Search
Marketing).
A
similar tool is located at www.wordtracker.com. Wordtracker
queries the meta search engine Dogpile so may not
be representative of what is being searched on the
web as a whole, but is still good for suggesting alternative
phrases and related phrases. Wordtracker has a subscription
service, with which you can order between one day
and one year’s access.
Trellian’s
KeywordDiscovery at www.keyworddiscovery.com is a
relative newcomer to the keyword suggestion market.
KeywordDiscovery can query multiple search engines
across the world and provides similar results to Overture
and Wordtracker.com as well as other services, but
with subscriptions starting at $32.50 per month this
premium option is geared more towards search marketing
professionals.
The
next step in picking the best terms is checking how
competitive they are. Ideally you want to find terms
that have high volume traffic but few websites competing
to rank for that term, and you can use various tricks
to judge this. Any page that is optimised for a term
will at least have that term in the title tag and
in anchor text of links pointing to the site, so by
going to Google and using the queries intitle:“phrase
here” and inanchor:“phrase here”, you can figure out
how many other pages have optimised for your chosen
phrase. The lower the number for these searches, the
less competitive the term is. For more information
about what these Google advanced search operators
do, go to www.google.com/help/operators.html.
Using
these tools should have now provided you with a list
of terms that are much more targeted than your original
generic phrases. These can include breaking your term
down by geographical location, or a specific product.
You will be able to optimise your site for multiple
phrases – remember that search engines index web pages
and not just websites. That means all of the pages
in your site can be found in search engines, which
in turn means all of those pages can be optimised
for different terms!
You
may also want to consider the “long tail” of search
phrases. These are obscure multi word phrases that
are only searched a couple of times, but are so specific
they can end up being the most targeted terms and
carry with them higher conversion rates. The best
way to target the long tail is to have a content rich
site – the more content you have the more likely you
are to be picked up for obscure terms that can be
found in your copy.
So
you should now finally have a list of the best possible
targeted phrases for your website! As you can see,
the process of choosing your keywords isn’t something
that should be taken lightly, and there is a lot of
work to do if you want to maximise the ability of
your site to attract natural search traffic. With
your final list you will now be ready to optimise
your pages to be found for those terms, but that is
for another time...
About
the Author:
Craig
Broadbent is Search Engine Optimisation Executive
for UK based Webevents Ltd, who provide online marketing
solutions with measurable results. Contact us for
details on our website design and bespoke search
engine optimisation services.
Read
more articles by: Craig Broadbent
This
article is distributed by: www.iSnare.com
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