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Learn the Basics of Keyword Research

Imagine that you were about to embark on a cross country drive from New York to Los Angeles.  Now imagine that you have no GPS, no map and no idea where you’re going.  That is exactly what trying to optimize a site without doing keyword research is like.  Nothing is more important to your initial SEO strategy than keyword research. Many small business owners don’t even know where to begin, so the effort put into optimizing a site to perform well in organic search results is often wasted and the ultimate result is a great deal of frustration.

It would be pretty easy to rank in the number one position for “supercalifragilisticexpialidocious cupcakes”, but how many people actually use that term in a keyword search?  I’ll answer that question for you:  none.  Step one of any organic SEO strategy must be to identify the keyword terms that apply to your site and determine which of them generate the greatest number of searches.  Without keyword research there is no way to properly optimize the title, META tags, text content, etc.

Step 1:  Finding Popular Keyword Terms

Choosing and sticking to some good search engine marketing software is the key. There are a large number of keyword suggestion tools to choose from.  I have selected the three that follow for their ease of use…and it doesn’t hurt that they’re also free.

Step 2:  Assessing Keyword Term Competition

Now that you’ve created a list of popular terms that apply to your site, the next step is determining how competitive those terms are.  Let’s be honest…”ipod” may be the most popular term that applies to your website, but that doesn’t mean it is a good term to target.  The competition for that term is ridiculously high.  That said, there are several ways to assess the competitiveness of a search term so you can choose realistic terms that apply to your website.

First, simply do a Google search using the term.  This is a very basic approach, but it can provide useful information and help you avoid wasting time doing more in-depth research into a term’s competition.  When you input “ipod” into a Google search the query returns about 240 million results.  Move on.  Focusing on a term with such enormous competition is not realistic for most websites.  Targeting a more specific term, like “refurbished ipod nano”, increases your likelihood of success substantially.

Once you’ve checked out the terms by doing a normal search, it’s time to take things a step further.  Rather than simply using the term itself in the search this time, input the term preceded by “allintitle:” (i.e. “allintitle:refurbished ipod nano” – without the quotation marks, of course).  This query will let you know how many website pages exist what that particular target term in the page title.

Similarly, doing a query for the same keyword term preceded by “allinanchor:” (i.e. “allinanchor:refurbished ipod nano” – again, without he quotation marks) will let you know the number of pages linked to with that particular anchor text.  Because the search engines use the anchor text of links to a page to help them to determine what a given page is about, anchor text is very important them.  Search engines also take the anchor text and number of links into account when ranking a page for that term, so knowing how many pages are linked to using that term is very useful.  As you would expect, the larger the number of results for the allintitle: and allinanchor: queries, the greater the competition is for that term.

Putting the Pieces Together

Once you’ve gathered useful competitive data on the list of applicable target terms for your site, the question becomes what to do next.  Rather than trying to optimize a page for an unrealistic term, like “ipod”, you can use the data you’ve collected via the allintitle: and allinanchor: queries to choose terms that are popular, but not ultra-competitive.  That is the key to developing a successful organic SEO strategy for your website – not only as it relates to on-page SEO factors titles, META tags and text content, but to link building strategies, as well.

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