Saturday, February 03, 2007

[keyword analysis research] - Discover 3 Reasons Why You MUST Target Long-Tail Keywords!

Recently, I found a great article about long-tail keywords from WordTracker Academy. Also, I like the article written by Stephen Mahaney. It is all about 3 good reasons why you have to target your long-tail keywords rather than generic keywords.

You'll discover 3 reasons to target your long-tail keywords for your own keyword analysis research here:

"Seasoned professionals in the arena of online marketing are aware of the fact that it's best to use keywords that target potential customers who are "late" in the buying cycle. So, naturally, the most common question we receive on this topic is something like...

How do I find out what these keywords are? ...and why are they so important?
In professional terms, what we are talking about here is the concept of targeting so-called long tail keywords.

Long Tail keywords are those 3 and 4-keyword phrases which are very, very specific to whatever you are selling. You see, whenever a customer uses a highly specific search phrase, they tend to be looking for exactly what they are actually going to buy. In virtually every case, such very specific searches are far more likely to convert to sales than general generic searches that tend to be geared more toward the type of research that consumers typically do prior to making a buying decision.

To help illustrate this phenomenon, let's take a look at the typical step-by-step buying path that a customer travels on the way to a making a purchase.

Consumer becomes aware of a product.
Consumer seeks information about that product in preparation for possible purchase.
Consumer evaluates alternatives to product (features, pricing, etc...).
Consumer makes their purchase decision.
Consumer pulls out their credit card and completes the transaction.
Consumer then evaluates the product after buying it and decides if they want to keep or return it.
Using the above six step path to a purchase as our model, you can probably already see that you want to target the consumer who is somewhere around step 4...

Consumer makes their purchase decision.

...because once they have made their decision to buy something, that's when they start using very specific search phrases to seek out their target purchase.

Now for the GOOD news...

Highly specific multi-word phrases tend to be far easier to rank well for than the more generic single keyword or double keyword phrases.

Here's a specific example. Let's say your site sells guided mountain climbing tours in California. At first, you might consider targeting a generic phrase like travel. After all, an adventure tour is generally the type of excursion people like to participate in while traveling on vacation.

However, if you tried to go after that phrase, you'd be facing direct competition from big sites like Yahoo.com, CNN.com and Travelocity.com. It's unlikely you'd be able to knock any of those sites out of the top 10 unless you're willing to invest a pile of money and a mountain of time.

But, even more important, travel isn't the best phrase for you to target anyway. That's because many people who search using that phrase are looking for items such as plane tickets, ocean cruises or just doing very general research on where they might like to go. They're probably not saying to themselves...

"I'm looking for someone who sells guided tours for beginners to climb Mount Shasta so I can take my family on a fun trip this summer."

If they were, they'd be entering something different than travel.

Even if you were to target a more specific phrase like mountain climbing you'd still be up against heavy hitters like About.com, Wikipedia.org, and the USDA forest service. And, unless you sell everything related to mountain climbing for every mountain around the world, the traffic you'd get for that keyword isn't likely to convert to many sales.

So let's look at some of the keywords that are specific to what you're selling—keywords that you can start ranking for and generating traffic and sales right away.

Here are a few highly specific keyphrases that relate to customers who are much later in the buying cycle—at least at step 3, probably at step 4 and possibly step 5:

california mountain climbing tours
beginner mountain climbing in california
guided mountain climbing tours
mount shasta family climbing tours
Of course, these are just a few examples. I'm sure you could think of many more. However, the point is twofold;

The long tail keywords are much easier to rank for.
People who search by using long tail keywords are far more likely to become buyers!
More Good News...

Of course this suggests that you should be creating pages that zero-in on snagging searchers who use long tail keywords. And, since there are potentially so many different long tail combinations that searchers may use to buy what you offer, that means you'll likely be creating more pages.

Well the goods news is that Google likes sites that have more pages. It makes the site look more substantial, more natural, and even more real in the eyes of the world's most popular search engine. Bear in mind that your "unique" pages need only be variants of your main offering(s) but focused on a specific long tail niche.

Therefore, each and every page will have a unique title, description meta tag, h1 header tag, and body content that emphasizes your offering by using the long tail keyword that you choose for each specific page. It isn't rocket science, but it sure does work well to snag consumers at the optimum stage of the buying process!

So, instead of focusing on just two or three highly competitive general keywords, target the dozens or even hundreds of easy-to-rank-for long tail keywords.

Also bear in mind, however, that the downside of focusing too much effort on the long tail is, if you target phrases which are too specific, you might not get enough traffic to sustain your business. That's why it's best to have:

a few pages sending you large amounts of less-targeted traffic, and
a large number of pages with each sending you small amounts of highly targeted traffic.
But overall, it's best to think of it this way; would you rather rank for one keyword which sent you 1000 visitors a day or 200 keyphrases, half of which sent you 1 buyer a day?

After you do the math you'll see that 100 buyers are much better than 1000 site visitors who are only doing research. And there is no question that the use of ultra-specific keywords demonstrate a greater intent to buy on the part of the customer. This simply leads to more sales which is, of course, what you are really after.

There's just no substitute for Research
In the end there is no substitute for doing your keyword research and determining which keywords have enough traffic to make them worth going after. And this effort must be dovetailed with doing your competitive intelligence research to determine which keywords you'll be able to rank for based on the sites you'd have to compete against.

Of course, Wordtracker is the hands-down best place to find a huge list of related keywords as well as learn how much traffic each is likely to provide your site. For many of the sites we manage, at least half of our customer traffic comes from these longer, more specific phrases—and such traffic tends to convert at a much higher level than generic 1 or 2-word keyword phrases.

So, now you have the tools it takes to get...

easier rankings
higher sales conversions
and many more pages indexed in Google
...all of which will certainly lead to a much more profitable bottom line!

Stephen Mahaney - President
Planet Ocean Communications
SearchEngineNews.com"

My bottom line is that I totally agree with this article. I strongly believe that long-tail keywords are MUCH better than general keywords. For example, if you are using pay-per-click to drive traffics to your website, I am sure that long-tail keywords will give you very high conversion rate. The more conversion rate you have, the more sales you get!

Click here now to discover long-tail keywords & expand your targeted keywords list TODAY!

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Wednesday, January 31, 2007

[keyword analysis research] - The Truth About Keyword Analysis Research

Recently, I found a great article written by Jay Stockwell. The article is all about the accurate of data generated by keyword analysis research tool. I would love to share with you, if you haven't read it yet. I highly recommend you to read it, if you are truly serious about keyword analysis research.

"You know what really frustrates me? People who talk about Keyword Research as if it's an exact science. Let me give anyone who needs it a "heads up". Keyword research is not an exact science and shouldn’t be discussed like it is. It's more of a black art based on skewed and inaccurate datasets. As a result it's very easy to screw up.

Yet there seems to be an underlying assumption in most articles written about the subject that keyword data is accurate and can be completely relied on. This is a dangerous assumption. Let me give you an example that demonstrates this.

Take a look at what the leading keyword research data companies were saying on what they consider to be the top 10 keywords for the phrase "fly fishing".

Here's what they came back with.

Word Tracker
fly fishing
fly fishing alaska
fly fishing equipment
fly fishing gear
alaska fly fishing
alaska fly fishing trip
fly fishing reels
fly fishing canada
alaska fly in fishing
fly fishing in alaska

Overture
fly fishing
fly in fishing
fly fishing trip
fly fishing gear
colorado fly fishing
fly fishing vacation
montana fly fishing
fly fishing in colorado
fly fishing equipment
fly fishing reel

Keyword Discovery
fly fishing
fly fishing equipment
fly fishing gear
michigan fly fishing
fly fishing reels
fly fishing rod
fly fishing alaska
fly fishing reel
fly fishing and tying journal
fly fishing tackle

Keyword Intelligence
fly fishing
fly fishing knots
fly fishing flies
fly fishing tips
oregon fly fishing guides
fly fishing gear
fly fishing supplies
fly fishing rods
oregon fly fishing guide
fly fishing reels

Web CEO
fly fishing
fly fishing vacation
fly fishing equipment
fly in fishing ontario
fly in fishing
fly fishing instruction
montana fly fishing
fly fishing gear
pennsylvania fly fishing
new zealand fly fishing

Notice anything?

That's right; none of them are the same. In fact, none of them are even close to being the same. So who’s right and who’s wrong?

Answer: they're all wrong.

Let me break it down for you. If one tool says that there are 1246 searches a month for a particular keyword, that doesn't mean you can say that during the past month the entire World Wide Web had 1246 searches.

What this figure means is that in this particular chunk or sample of data, that keyword was found 1246 times. The only time we could ever be sure that there were 1246 would be if the sample was every single search engine on the Internet and included 100% of their search volume. No tool does this - not even close.

To highlight this, Wordtracker (one of the leading keyword research companies) samples around 2% of the total Internet search volume. This sample size will provide some relatively stable data for popular keywords, but will proportionally become less accurate as the keyword popularity decreases. In simple terms, the less popular the keyword, the more likely that keyword data source will be wrong.

In fact you could argue statistically that there'll be millions of keywords that are being searched for up to 50 times a month that won’t even register in the Wordtracker database.

It's not important for you to know why, you just need to understand that the mathematics behind it say it’s so.

Now I'm not saying that to discredit Wordtracker. They do a fantastic job of keeping a massive keyword database that is arguably the most accurate in the industry. It’s just that unless your sample includes every single search, statistically, missing data is unavoidable. This problem goes across the board for all keyword research services.

So should we all just abandon keyword research tools because they aren't 100% accurate? Not at all! It just means that we need to be more aware of the limitations of the data we use; especially when we’re researching within niche markets.

Niche marketers need to pay attention to this because they are often targeting the fringe keyword phrases. More often than not deep within the statistical long tail.

So keep in mind these keyword research tool limitations next time you think you have found yourself a hot niche. Here are two good ways I double check my keyword assumptions before I invest too much time in a niche market.

Cross reference with multiple keyword tools to see if they are all saying the same things. NicheBOT V2 allows you to do this easily as it provides data from the major keyword data sources.

Run an AdWords campaign for a couple of days with your keywords to see how many searches they will receive. Just remember that unless there are less than 8 ads for that keyword, the impression number will be lower as your ad doesn't necessarily get shown for every search.

Remember, always use keyword data with skepticism. It's almost always not 100% accurate."

Conclusion, I agreed with Jay that the data accurate is NOT 100%. Personally, it is a great guideline for your own online business. Also, those keyword research tool can definitely help you to DISCOVER more niche keywords and markets. They save a TON of your time!

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