The purpose and importance of marketing keywords was relatively simple until recently: Keywords were tags that Google and the other search engines used for figuring out when to show a piece of content, be it a web page or an ad. If you wanted Google to know that your latest blog post was all about women’s shoes in New York, you peppered your content with those keywords. You also might throw in related keywords for good measure.
Not anymore!
That was before keywords became a blunt instrument. Marketers got really competitive with keywords, and some unscrupulous actors gamed the system by peppering content with keywords as a way to get better search rankings. So Google did what Google does: It changed the rules of the game in the name of delivering better content to the people searching for answers.
What are keywords?
SEO keywords are single words or short phrases that represent the search queries that people use in a search engine. Website owners or marketers select keywords and use them to guide content creation and optimize their webpages as part of their SEO strategy.
When you align your content creation and optimization with the words, topics, products and services your target audience is looking for, you have a better chance of showing up in the search results.
One reason keyword optimization is important is that it helps communicate to the search engines what a webpage is about. And that can improve the chances that a search engine will find a webpage relevant for a particular query.
It’s important to note that Google uses many signals to determine if a page is relevant for a query, not just keywords.
What are long-tail keywords?
Long-tail keywords string together three or more words to create a more specific keyword phrase. Searchers perform long-tail queries in the following situations:
- To narrow down what they are looking for as they search for products, services or information. When people are on a buying or knowledge journey, they often start with very broad or general keywords, maybe two-word phrases. As they begin to refine their research, search queries become much more specific and usually longer. So long-tail queries often have a higher conversion rate than the broad terms do.
- When using voice search, for example on a mobile device. Data shows that 48% of consumers are using voice assistants for general web searches. Voice queries tend to be much more conversational because people are speaking and not typing.
In a nutshell, long-tail keywords allow you to target very specific queries during every step of the searcher’s journey.
What You Shouldn’t Do with Keywords
When you’re creating content for the web:
- Don’t use keywords to trick or mislead. One example is keyword stuffing. Another would be trying to use keywords that are off topic for your page and site. Google does not respond well to keyword abuse. To be rewarded in the search results, your site’s SEO needs to stay within Google’s Webmaster Guidelines.
- Don’t target keywords that do not exactly describe the contents of your page.
- Don’t use keywords awkwardly in your content. Keywords should be incorporated into the body text and meta information in a way that is natural and subtle.
Why Are Keywords Important to SEO & Marketing?
Keywords help website owners with the following:
- Identify and speak the language of the target market.
- Create useful content for the target audience.
- Get content in front of the right people at the right time.
- Communicate to Google that a webpage is a match for a query.
- Improve search engine rankings by helping Google understand the webpage content.
- Drive more qualified traffic to appropriate webpages.
- Increase time on site by directing more qualified traffic to webpages.
- Increase conversions by helping consumers find you rather than your competitors.
All of these matter for SEO. To elaborate, keyword research helps you understand how your target market describes your products or services. It also shows you how people ask for more information on your topics when using a search engine.
Armed with these words and phrases, you can come up with ideas for new content. You can also optimize your webpages to match a searcher’s intent and answer a searcher’s questions.
Keyword research and optimization can improve your chances of showing up on Page 1 of the search results. In fact, data shows that most title tags on Google’s first page contained keywords that were an exact or partial match of that search query.
Aside from rankings, keyword research has other benefits that can help you better serve your consumer.
For instance, say you’re a bread company researching the keyword phrase “organic bread.” During your research, you find that there is a high search volume for the term “organic bread flour.” Could this be a new product opportunity?
How do you do keyword research?
There’s a lot to keyword research, but here is the process in four basic steps:
- Start with a “brainstorm” list, also known as a “seed” list. Document anything you can think of that would describe your product, service or the information you have to share.
- Use a keyword research tool. Use an analysis tool that gives you data on the ideas in your seed list.
- Expand and refine your list. Discover suggested keyword phrases from the keyword research tool. Find out the actual words people use as they search for your products, services or information. Find out how often the queries are used, which can help you prioritize the work.
- Verify keyword phrases. Analyze the competition in the search results that show up for the target keywords. Do you see webpages that offer products, services or information like yours? If so, it means you’re in the right space.
But what most don’t know is how to make a winning Amazon SEO strategy and crack the Amazon A9 algorithm. There are a lot of misconceptions out there about Amazon SEO and how it works. In the following article, we will break down everything you need to know to rank in Amazon, diving into their algorithm and explaining what Amazon SEO really is. Stay tuned!