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Here Are Three Ways to Improve Your Keyword Research

Organic search is one of the best distribution channels at your disposal. It’s predictable. Traffic compounds over time. You can use it to reach your target audience at a pivotal moment, whether they’re trying to understand a painful problem, looking for the solution, or actively trying to purchase a product.

Keyword research is the process of systematically identifying the best opportunities to grow your organic search traffic. You identify the common words and phrases your target audience uses to search for information and answers. You prioritize the best queries and create content to answer them—placing your company front-and-center of their search results in the process.

That means looking for keywords that are:

Finding these keywords has always been a challenge, but in an increasingly competitive world, where the best keywords are already “taken” and new articles need to unseat incumbents with years of accumulated traffic and links, it’s harder than ever.

Today, it pays to approach keyword research differently. With that in mind, here are three of our favorite strategies for immediately improving your keyword research.

1. Tackle “Low-Volume” Keywords

It’s tempting to fixate exclusively on keywords with tens of thousands of monthly searches, but this is becoming less and less tenable. All too often, rival companies have already beaten you to the punch, building a competitive moat of backlinks and domain authority that you’ll struggle to cross. Many niche B2B industries lack these ultra-high-volume keywords altogether.

And yes, we’re putting “low-volume” in quotes for a reason—“low-volume” keywords account for the huge majority of the opportunity for SaaS companies. To some folks, low is anything below 10,000 searches/month. To others, it’s 50 searches/month. Whatever your definition, consider that most “high-volume” keywords are very difficult to rank for and provide nothing but a steady flow of high-bounce traffic anyway.

Instead, it’s a great idea to start bolstering your content marketing strategy with “low-volume” keywords with hundreds of searches per month, instead of thousands.

Even truly low-volume keywords (less than 100 searches per month) can be lucrative if they show clear buying intent. Ahrefs reports less than 10 monthly searches for “buy crm software online”—but for a CRM company, those ten searches could represent hundreds or thousands of dollars in revenue.

2. Map the Search Intent

Single keywords often cater to multiple searches from multiple types of people. Let’s take “content marketing” as our example: what are these searchers looking for? It could be a definition. It could be a strategy, or a book, or a marketing agency.

Looking at the search engine results page (SERP) itself, we find a host of different types of content:

Google surfaces these different types of content in response to the different intents behind the query “content marketing.” As a result, writing an article tailored to this single keyword is a whole lot more complicated than it first appears.

To map your article content to the intent behind any search, try this four-step process:

  1. Sanity-check the common usage. A quick Google search is often enough to check whether your understanding of a keyword matches the common usage. Case in point: the keyword “branded TV show” might seem to intuitively relate to branded video content, like Wistia’s amazing One, Ten, One Hundred documentary series; instead, all of the top results refer to the Branded TV show from 1965.
  2. Analyze search features. Google often enriches search results with “search features,” like featured snippets and interactive maps. These features provide a good indication of the basic intent behind the search—maps suggest a local business search, while a product carousel suggests buying intent. Using a tool like Ahrefs, this process can be run at scale for thousands of keywords.
  3. Read the top-ranking content. Dig into the existing search results to understand the types of content Google believes best satisfy the query, and the audience each article is targeted at. Some queries will have multiple audiences: the SERP for “group interview activities” is split almost 50/50 between articles for employers and articles for job seekers. Choose the most relevant intent for your business, or else, plan on creating multiple articles to address multiple intents.
  4. Identify unserved “gaps” in search intent. Lastly, ask yourself: is anything missing from these search results? Perhaps none of the top-ranking articles answer the query as directly as you’d like. Perhaps they’re all long, meandering “skyscraper” posts, while you’d prefer brevity. Use your article to meet this unserved intent, and create the article you’d like to read.

Single keywords harboring multiple search intents means that volume alone isn’t a particularly useful metric: you need to determine if it’s relevant volume, and whether that volume estimate should be split across multiple search intents.

3. Diversify Your Keyword Sources

Keyword research tools like AdWords, Ahrefs, SEMrush and Moz remain the backbone of keyword research, but with thousands of marketers staring at the same tools and data sets, there’s a competitive edge to be found by looking to other sources.

By their nature, SEO tools are backwards-looking. They’re great for showcasing the keywords and content types that have worked in the past, but they’re powerless to show you better, untested ways to convey information and match search intent. SEO tools help you emulate existing content; if you want to create something that’s radically—not marginally—better, you need to look to different sources.

These are some of my favorite non-conventional keyword sources:

Consider this the bleeding-edge of keyword research. Many of the queries you’ll uncover won’t have masses of search volume, but they’ll reward you in other ways. You’ll be the first to address a burgeoning topic. You’ll cover interesting, novel topics while your competitors rehash the same, tired handful of “how-to” articles. You’ll position yourself at the top of the SERP, should volume increase over time.

Keyword Research Doesn’t Stop When You Hit “Publish”

Keyword research isn’t a set-it-and-forget-it exercise. After you’ve published an article, it’s a good idea to periodically revisit your content and current rankings.

Lastly, remember that content that lives alone, dies alone. While a one-off keyword can offer a boost to organic traffic, long-term, compounding growth is a product of targeting lots of related keywords. Every single keyword—no matter how tantalizing the volume on offer—needs to function as part of a broader content marketing strategy.

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