Keyword Research

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Keyword research is a discipline embraced and used by search engine optimizers to allow them to determine which search terms people are actually entering into the search engines when conducting a search.

Contents

[edit] Background Data

Current data indicates that:

  • 70.4% of the population of the United States is online [1],
  • there were 10.5 billion searches in the month of October[2],
  • 91% of internet users use search engines [3],
  • there are approximately 142 millions sites online [4], or an estimated 30 billions web pages.

In this highly competitive and growing global market place, for a company to understand what terminology, keywords and phrases their online target market is utilizing to search for their offering, it is imperative that the company conduct extensive keyword research.

[edit] Potential Barriers

[edit] Branding Perceptions

Many company leaders and managers have their own interpretation of how they want their brand to be portrayed and ostensibly perceived online. A luxury second hand car dealer, for example, may only want to include the words ‘pre-owned automobiles’ on their web site, and not ‘used cars’. The fact that thousands of people are searching for a used car, and very few are searching for a preowned automobile needs to be communicated.

[edit] Existing Brands

If a company decides to sell Nike trainers online, the market is pretty competitive, and the Nike brand itself is predominant.

[edit] Generic keywords

Focusing on generic keywords that gain an enormous number of searches, but which also have an enormous amount of competition is usually not worth it unless the keyword is highly likely to provide you with converting traffic, and unless you have a very big marketing budget. Jill Whalen goes as far as to say that knowing the top words searched is of no value at all [5].

While determining what a company’s core ‘generic’ offering is, sourcing and data mining all the combination and permutations of how the words are used in conjunction with other related terms can provide a wealth of what are termed ‘long-tail’ keywords. (See below)

[edit] Overlooking geographic targeting

Depending on what a company sells or offers, overlooking the likelihood of the inclusion of geographical locations in the search query may be highly detrimental; ‘homes for rent Edmonton’, ‘used car dealer new york’, ‘chicago hotels’, ‘dallas Chinese restaurant’ etc.

[edit] Long Tail

The long tail is a type of statistical distribution where a high-frequency population is followed by a low-frequency population which gradually "tails off".

The long tail in keyword research is basically an expansion of a core, generic, high volume keyword phrase to include numerous combinations and permutations of the keywords and their associated or relevant phrases. These phrases individually are unlikely to account for a great deal of searches, but when taken as a whole, can provide significant traffic. The long-tail is unlikely ever to exceed searches for a brand name if the brand name is reasonably well established, but the volume of converting traffic these terms can generate by nature of their specificity and relevance is worth investigating. Ken Jurina reiterates that thorough keyword research consistently uncovers surprising topics in every study and presents him with numerically supported ratios that challenge his assumptions about his industry [6].


[edit] Conducting Keyword Research

(Please note, this is not an entry on how to apply keyword research.). Keyword research should not be undertaken ad hoc. It is the foundation [7]. for all natural search engine optimization techniques as the keywords finally selected based on search volume and likely ability to compete should be included in some, if not all, of the following SEO onpage elements, as well as in any anchor text backlinking to the relevant webpages:

Christine Churchill, another noted SEO expert simply states that keyword research is the bedrock of successful web page optimization [8].

[edit] Sources of traditional paid and free keyword research data:

[edit] Uses of Advanced Keyword research

* Business Research - Product Research - Brand Equity - Competitive Intelligence - New Market & Product Opportunity Identification - Consumer Feedback

* Social Research - Political Topics - Public Issues - Celebrity Brand

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ Internet World Stats (2007). US Onine Population (English). Internetworldstats.com. Retrieved on November 11, 2007.
  2. ^ comScore (2007). US October Search Volume (English). Comscore.com. Retrieved on October 20, 2007.
  3. ^ comScore (2007). Search Engine Usage (English). Comscore.com. Retrieved on October 08, 2007.
  4. ^ NetCraft.com (2007). Web sites Online (English). NetCraft.com. Retrieved on October 14, 2007.
  5. ^ Jill Whalen (2007). Top Words Searched are Valueless (English). HighRankings.com. Retrieved on June 14, 2007.
  6. ^ Shop.org Blog (2007). Keyword Value (English). Shop.org Blog. Retrieved on September 18, 2007.
  7. ^ Shop.org Blog (2007). Keywords the Foundations of SEM Campaign (English). WebProNews.com. Retrieved on May 12, 2007.
  8. ^ BruceClay Blog (2007). Keywords the Bedrock of SEM (English). BruceClay Blog. Retrieved on Dec 04, 2007.