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Logical Digital Marketing

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5 Minutes Read

How to Find the Right Keyword for Your Content


Deciding on the right keywords is crucial for creating content that ranks well and attracts the right audience. But with so many keywords to choose from, how do you narrow it down to the best ones? Follow this step-by-step guide to research, select, and incorporate effective keywords into your content.

Start With Some Brainstorming

Don’t just dive right into the keyword research. First, spend some time brainstorming words and phrases that are relevant to your topic. Make a list of terminology your target audience may use when searching for content like yours. This gives you a starting point for your keyword research.

Get Specific

Generic one-word keywords like “marketing” or “software” are too broad. You’re going to have much more success targeting longer, more specific keyword phrases. The longer the phrase, the less competition there usually is. Some good starting points are three to five-word phrases that describe your content accurately and concisely.

Use Keyword Research Tools

Now it’s time to feed your list into some keyword research tools. Google’s keyword planner should be your go-to for initial research. Input some of your target phrases and take a look at the average monthly search volume and competition data it provides. Other helpful free tools include Übersuggest, Answer the Public, and Keyword Surfer. If your budget allows, paid tools like Ahrefs and SEMrush provide even more robust data.

Look For The “Just Right” Level Of Searches

When assessing keywords, you generally want to find ones with enough search volume to drive traffic, but not so much competition that it will be impossible to rank. As a general guideline, monthly search volumes between 1,000-10,000 may provide a “just right” level of potential traffic versus effort to rank for those terms. But higher and lower volume keywords could also be a good fit depending on your goals and content.

Align Keywords With User Intent

Think about the intent behind the searches you’re targeting. Broadly speaking, searches fall into three tiers of intent:

Informational - The searcher wants to learn or research more about something Navigational - The searcher is looking for a specific website or product Transactional - The searcher intends to make an immediate purchase or acquisition

Make sure you can create content that satisfies the intent behind the keywords you choose. If not, those pieces are unlikely to keep users on page and please search engines.

Look For Low Competition Long Tail Keywords Too

Don’t just go after the most popular, highest traffic keywords. Expand your list by researching longer, more specific long tail versions too. For example, for mountain biking you would target both:

mountain biking” - Very high competition but extremely popular search term.
beginner mountain biking trails Bay Area” - Much less competition but still good targeted traffic potential from that search!

Often, you can rank for more niche long tail terms reasonably quickly. And they add up to drive just as many visitors over time.

Evaluate Keywords From Multiple Angles

Make sure to look at keyword difficulty, cost per click if advertising, trends over time, and commercial value per visitor. Getting this 360-degree view helps ensure you choose sustainable keywords that will continue driving relevant traffic longer term.

Organize Your Keywords By Topic And Intent

As your list grows, you need to organize your keywords effectively to apply them to content creation. Sort them into groupings of similar topic areas and intent buckets like this:


Improve Mountain Bike Handling

Informational

Skill Improvement


Mountain Biking Trail Reviews

Informational

Specific Location


Full Face Mountain Bike Helmets

Informational

Product Reviews


Hardtail Mountain Bikes Under $1000

Transactional

Specific Budget


Categorizing your keywords this way makes it easier to see what kinds of content you should be creating to ranking for multiple terms at once.

Define 2-5 Primary Target Keywords Per Piece

Each blog post, guide, or content asset you produce should laser focus on just a handful of primary keywords. Trying to cram in endless strings of keywords will make your content sound unnatural. But concentrating on just a few allows you to strategically place them for better rankings, without awkward phrasing issues. Use your categorized list to pull out just the 2-5 best fitting keywords per piece of content.

Also Work In Supplementary Long Tail Keywords Naturally

Your primary keywords should drive the focus of each piece of content. But once you’ve established them within the copy naturally, also take the opportunity to sprinkle in a few very targeted long tail keywords where appropriate. Just take care that inclusion of supplementary terms always feels natural and relevant, not shoehorned in.

Include Keywords In Multiple Elements Of Your Content

To maximize exposure within search engine results, keywords should appear within multiple elements of your posts and pages beyond the body copy itself. For example, also include core terms in:

Page Titles and Descriptions Section Headers (Like H2 or H3 tags in HTML)
Image Titles and Alt Attributes
URL Slugs/Permalinks

This gives search engines more signals about relevance to reader queries.

Track Your Keyword Rankings

Once you’ve published your content, use tracking tools to monitor your search engine rankings for target keywords over time. Google Search Console provides some basic capabilities free. Third party software like SEMrush, Ahrefs, or Moz offer more robust rank tracking with competitor data too. Monitoring your rankings helps assess what keywords are gaining traction or need more content boosting them to rank.

Adjust Underperforming Keywords If Needed

If over time some keywords consistently underperform or seem impossible to crack the top rankings for, revisit your list. Prune terms people have stopped searching for as often. And replace them with fresh keywords relevant to new or more evergreen pieces of content you produce.

Revisit Approaches As Algorithm Updates Shift The Landscape

Google and other search engines alter their ranking algorithms many times per year. So even if you do everything right, the playing field may suddenly shift. If you notice abrupt declines in traffic and rankings despite steady search volume, recheck your keywords against the latest best practices. You may need to adjust to new factors search engines apply when it comes to keywords and overall content promotion.

Mastering keyword research does demand some ongoing effort to stay aligned with searches. But investing time into researching and targeting the most efficient keywords for each piece of content pays off tenfold in increased organic visibility. Using this structured process, you’ll discover the search terms that best connect with audiences interested in what you publish.


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