Choosing good keywords is vital to increasing your website traffic. Before choosing which keywords to focus on, you should brainstorm possible keywords that people might use to find your website. After brainstorming keywords, then use a thesaurus to come up with more words. You can also use a tool like the Google® Sandbox Tool. Enter in keywords and the Google® Sandbox Tool will return a list of words it believes are related words. Other websites including, NicheBot, and Wordtracker offers a similar service as well.
Another method of finding keywords is to take a look at your competitors websites, and determine what keywords they are targeting. One method of doing this is to take a look at their keywords meta tag. In Internet explorer you can do this by:
1.Clicking on the top pulldown menu “Viewâ€.
2.Scrolling down and click on the menu item “Sourceâ€.
This will show you the source code for that page. Then look for a line that looks like this:
This example uses the keywords meta tag for the home page of our dinosaur website. The words after “content=†are the keywords that are considered important by the person (in this case me) who wrote the HTML for the page. From this meta tag you can find out some of the keywords that are being targeted on the page. Add any keywords used in this tag to your list.
Once you have your list of keywords it’s time to find out if anyone searches for them. You can do this by using the Overture® search term suggestion tool. The Overture® search term suggestion tool shows you how many times a certain keyword was searched for the previous month. You can use this tool to find out how many times people search for keywords related to your website. For example, go to the Overture® search term suggestion tool and type in “dinosaurâ€. Then click the button to the right. You will now see a screen that shows a big table of keyword phrases that include the word dinosaur. Here is an example snippet of the list for September 2004:
109644 dinosaur
15899 dinosaur picture
8433 dinosaur costume
5548 dinosaur game
5419 barney the dinosaur
5018 dinosaur fossil
4575 dinosaur toy
The number to the left is the number of times people searched for a particular keyword. The words to the right of the numbers are the keyword phrases that were searched for.
One thing you will quickly notice is that most people search using only one or two keywords, sometimes 3 or 4. So at this point in time, optimizing your site for keyword phrases longer than 4 words is probably a waste of time.
Special Note: Marketing research suggests that people who use longer keyword phrases (3 or more words) are more likely to buy products. This is probably because they are more likely to be looking for a specific product.
Another important note is that the Overture® tool does not distinguish between singular and plural keywords.
Using the example above you can see that people searched for dinosaur over 100,000 times in September. The dinosaur business is fairly competitive for the keywords “dinosaur†and “dinosaursâ€. In retrospect, I would have done better to have optimized our site for the keywords “dinosaurs for kidsâ€, rather than “dinosaur time machineâ€. That way we could have become highly ranked for the keywords “dinosaurs for kids†(which we are now). The word “dinosaurs†is contained in the phrase “dinosaurs for kidsâ€, which means we eventually would have been ranked higher for the word “dinosaurs†as well.