Keyword Research With Wordtracker: A Step-By-Step Guide
Ryan Cole
Search engine optimization (SEO) refers to methods of making
web sites “friendly” to the different search engines, and many
consider it the best strategy for long-term traffic generation.
Optimizing your site doesn’t necessarily guarantee high search
engine placement, but you’ll have a much better shot at it than
those whose sites aren’t optimized. And the core of search
engine optimization — the foundation upon which you’ll base
your entire optimization strategy — is keyword research.
Anyone reading this article probably realizes the futility of
just guessing which keywords to optimize for. It’s possible to
do everything else right but still fail miserably. You might
optimize your site for keywords that don't get any searches at
all, or — what's more likely — you'll choose keywords that are
too general and nearly impossible to rank highly for. The
answer? Use keyword research tools.
The tool that I use and recommend is called Wordtracker.
Wordtracker is a keyword research tool that uses metacrawler
information to pull keywords and key phrases from a search query
database. (Don’t worry if you didn’t understand that — neither
do I.) What it means is, Wordtracker helps you find relevant
keywords and then tells you how often they get searches. Here’s
how to do it:
First, you’ll need to sign up for an account. You can get a
free trial, or you can get a paid membership for a day, a week,
a month or a year. The free trial is severely limited and not
very helpful; it shows results only for MSN, and it allows you
to research just 30 keywords at a time. You’ll want results for
Google and Yahoo! most of all, and you’ll have to go through
hundreds or thousands of terms before you find the really juicy
keywords you’ll want to optimize for. That’s why I recommend
signing up for a one-day membership at first. You’ll get to try
Wordtracker with all the features enabled, and a day’s
membership only costs around seven bucks.
Once you have your account, log in to the members area. Click
on “Keyword Universe” (top left) and you’ll get a screen
prompting you to enter a search term. Enter a generic term as a
jumping-off point. For example, if you run an online dating
site, you should enter a term like “get dates online” or
“internet dating.” It doesn’t matter if the term is incredibly
broad; we’ll narrow it down in the next step.
Let’s go ahead and use the dating example for this exercise.
I’ve entered the term “online dating,” leaving both the lateral
and thesaurus match options checked. This gives us a lot of
different related terms we can expand upon, including a bunch
that we might not have come up with on our own.
I’ll now click on “online dating” in these results, which
brings up a new box on the right side of the screen. This is a
list of all the search queries for the term “online dating”
that appear in Wordtracker’s database. The first column
(”Keyword”) shows the search query; the second (”Count”) shows
the number of times the search query appears in the database;
the third (”Predict”) predicts the number of searches for that
query in any given 24-hour period; and the fourth (”Dig”) lets
you “dig deeper” to find even more specific variations of that
query (click on the shovel icon to dig deeper). Clicking on a
search query in this list will add it to your keyword basket,
or you can choose to add all of them at once. I’ll add them
all, and then click on the blue arrow in the bottom right
corner (”Click here for step 3″).
Now we have a few options. “Export Keywords” sends the list to
a text file that you can print out or cut-and-paste. “E-mail
Keywords” lets you e-mail the list to yourself or anyone else.
“Competition Search” is what we’re really after, so click on
that. This will bring you to a screen that lets you choose two
search engines to check for competing sites. Definitely choose
Google, and you’ll probably want to choose either Yahoo! or MSN
for your second one. Leave “KEI Analysis” and “Quotes” set to
“Yes,” and then click “Proceed.”
We now come to a page that ranks our keywords by KEI, or
Keyword Effectiveness Index. You’ll notice that each search
term has been assigned a KEI value. The higher this is, the
better the search term; i.e., pick a search term with a high
KEI value, and it’ll be easier to optimize your site for it.
Each term has a different KEI depending on the search engine,
so be sure to check the same terms in different engines,
depending on which ones you want to rank on. (Also, remember
that you can only perform a competition search for 100 terms at
a time. If you have more than 100 in your basket, you'll have to
go back and do everything again for the next 100.)
According to Wordtracker, KEI is determined by comparing the
number of competing sites for that term with the number of
times it appears in the Wordtracker database. A KEI value of 10
or less means a poor keyword, between 10 and 100 is a good
keyword, between 100 and 400 is an excellent keyword, and 400
and up is practically a gift.
The results for “online dating” don’t look very promising. Our
best term for Google is “dating agencies online in somerset,”
with a KEI value of 84.941. If this happens to be your niche —
that is, online dating agencies in Somerset — then this is a
fantastic keyword. For most of us, this would be pretty
useless. We can see that the next one down is “top online
search adult dating service hiv positive dating” with a KEI
value of 22.091. Again, probably not quite the niche we’re in,
and the KEI isn’t nearly as high as we’d like it to be.
At this point, you’d go back to step one, choose a different
result, and repeat the process all over again. With some
patience, you’ll uncover those juicy niche keywords with high
counts and low competition, and these are the words you’ll
optimize your site for.
About The Author: To see a version of this tutorial with screen
shots illustrating each step, and for more articles by Ryan
Cole, visit
http://www.theinternetmarketingblog.org/2006/09/09/using-wordtracker-to-improve-search-engine-ranks/
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