Post by account_disabled on Dec 11, 2023 9:46:33 GMT
If you're optimizing a Jaguar for a blog about big cats (thanks for this post!), you'll find yourself running into a ton of competing manufacturers from some sort of Indian (who knew?) car. The next thing I think about is, are my client readers, the people who pay my bills, typing in that keyword to find information? A product? Anything else? If I were running an e-commerce site, I would focus on buying keywords (more on that below.
For example, if I were doing SEO for a review site, I would focus on informational C Level Contact List keywords. I would look at words like reviews, store, price, comparison, information, specifications, etc. All the words added to the end of the subject heading indicate what searchers expect to find in their search. Once I get the word list from about the words. I would add these intent suffixes and prefixes to keywords and consider which phrases people would actually be looking for. I'll use tools like Tools to understand what people are actually searching for in relation to the keywords the Keyword Tool gives me and come up with a new, improved list of target keywords.
A ridiculous example lets say you have a client who runs a website that sells gourmet coffee and coffee accessories. You wouldn’t optimize for the word coffee because that would be ridiculous. But let’s put reality aside for a moment and consider why this is ridiculous. This is ridiculous for two reasons: Coffee is an extremely competitive term that is dominated by sites like Starbucks and Wikipedia. It would take a monumental effort to build a website there. Coffee beans I can't drink this.
For example, if I were doing SEO for a review site, I would focus on informational C Level Contact List keywords. I would look at words like reviews, store, price, comparison, information, specifications, etc. All the words added to the end of the subject heading indicate what searchers expect to find in their search. Once I get the word list from about the words. I would add these intent suffixes and prefixes to keywords and consider which phrases people would actually be looking for. I'll use tools like Tools to understand what people are actually searching for in relation to the keywords the Keyword Tool gives me and come up with a new, improved list of target keywords.
A ridiculous example lets say you have a client who runs a website that sells gourmet coffee and coffee accessories. You wouldn’t optimize for the word coffee because that would be ridiculous. But let’s put reality aside for a moment and consider why this is ridiculous. This is ridiculous for two reasons: Coffee is an extremely competitive term that is dominated by sites like Starbucks and Wikipedia. It would take a monumental effort to build a website there. Coffee beans I can't drink this.