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#1 |
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Product Creation
War Room Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: New York
Posts: 234
Thanks: 159
Thanked 10 Times in 9 Posts
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Hey Warriors,
Hope you are all well ![]() So really: What Makes a Keyword a Great Keyword? What are you standards when doing keyword research (and what tools you use for that)? I mean on google keyword tool what are the important numbers and then how you define that the keyword is a good keyword? I am looking to do a list of 50 or so keywords to write articles but I a not sure which criteria to follow when doing my research. Any help on the subject is greatly appreciated ![]() Thanks James |
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#2 |
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Wordsmith
War Room Member
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: , , USA.
Posts: 1,696
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For me the definition of a great keyword is simple... are lots
of people searching it... and is there low to moderate competition? Tsnyder |
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#3 |
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Active Warrior
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Southern California
Posts: 72
Thanks: 8
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Ah, James...
If only your question was an "easy" one! ![]() Since you mentioned that you are planning on using these keywords to write articles around, I will give my advice relative to article marketing. (I do keyword research differently depending on what I am trying to achieve... ie organic search engine rankings, ppc traffic to bring buyers, etc.) If you are going to be writing articles to promote a product, then you want keyword phrases that have "decent" search volume (a subjective term you'll have to decide upon) and "reasonable" competition (unfortunately, another subjective term). It makes no sense to write an article around a keyword phrase that gets 10 searches a month so you want to know what kind of search volume is out there before you begin writing. As you'd also like to get your article to rank on the first page of a search engine, it is important to check the competitiveness for the term as well. You can do this by simply Googling the phrase, surrounded in quotes, to see how many people are targeting this exact phrase. So, if your article is about Dog Obedience Training you put "dog obedience training" into the search area and search. Look at the results to the upper right to see how many pages are indexed for that exact phrase. If it's in the millions, it will usually take a good deal of time and additional work to get your article to rank. If it's 300,000 or less (not a strict value) then you may be able to rank for the term pretty quickly. As far as tools go, my favorite is the "Micro Niche Finder" which is found here: Micro Niche Finder. (not an aff link ;- ) It is available as a one-time payment as opposed to a monthly fee and it is both efficient and powerful. It also allows you to check the "OCI" of any particular keyword phrase (Online Commercial Intent) so you will know if the term is likely to draw buyers or looky-loos. Of course, you can still check the OCI (manually) for free at: Detecting Online Commercial Intention: Audience Intelligence: adCenter Labs |
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Last edited by Kevin Koop; 07-05-2009 at 09:46 PM. Reason: grammatical error ;- ) |
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#4 |
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Senior Warrior Member
War Room Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Guadeloupe (Caribbean Sea)
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A great keyword is a buy keyword (that means that people WILL buy).
If there is a lot of competition, just pay for it. Franck |
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AMAZING WSO >> Affiliate Launch Method? Easy $500.00 to $3,000.00 Monthly <<
Heard About The Affiliate Marketing Training Mentor's Club? Kevin Riley said: "Franck, glad to see you bringing out MORE and MORE GREAT stuff" |
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#5 |
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HyperActive Warrior
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 100
Thanks: 3
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A great keyword is one which has less competition, has a high number of searches, is a buy keyword and is targeted towards your product.
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#6 |
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Warrior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 14
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I am going to agree with Kevin on this one. When writing an article for a particular keyword you should be trying to get that article to rank for the keyword.
The two free tools i use most is googles keyword tool as well as the adlabs commercial intention. I try and find a strong balance. A keyword with 3000+ searches a month, I use a quarter million as competition. Once I have a list of the words that fit both those requirements. I go to the adlabs commercial intention tool and then rank them based on commercial intention and attack them in that order. |
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