Now here's an offer - do you have questions
about keywords and keyword density?
Is the landing page obviously
about the keyword?
The only surprising thing
about keyword - search - based recruiting is that it's still hanging on all these years later.
I'll explain more
about keyword research in another post but there's plenty of info on the web about it if you don't want to wait.
Once you have an initial keyword list compiled, you can start thinking
about keyword search volume and keyword competition.
Think
about the keywords you'd want to be found under on search engines and on LinkedIn itself.
Now on the left hand side click the «Questions» link (under «By Type»), and you should see a list of questions
about your keyword.
Six years ago and more, it was the norm to write short blog posts, 500 words or less,
about any keyword - focused topic you could find in your niche.
Then I realized that the post is all
about keywords, and your best target could be «long tail keywords», and you got almost everybody to use it in their comments too!
The beautiful part
about those keywords is that they are less competitive, which means it is easier to rank for them, and they convert better than head terms.
We have lots more articles on this subject: you can read
about keyword research, content writing and improving your site structure.
For additional tools, see this post by Marieke
about keyword research tools.
Google no longer cares
about keyword density.
If you are serious
about keyword research you can't bank on Google's free keyword planner tool.
Most of the time when people talk
about keyword research, they focus on the Google Keyword Planner.
Blaine — Im glad you caught my points
about keyword research for products.
Earlier, I talked
about the keywords that are sending you organic traffic.
Don't worry too much
about keyword density — it's an old - school concept now.
With a content calendar, you can start thinking
about keyword possibilities even before someone writes an article, describes a service, or creates a blog post.
I learn something much more important
about keyword research.
HEY, thanks for sharing great information
about Keyword Research Tools this article is very helpful.Recently I am using Google Keyword Planner.
nice post, actually this is the best place to learn
about keyword research, can anybody help to promote me http://www.infowebtechsolutions.com
Great post nick, of course that your post
about keyword research is very helpul for everyone when needed SEO strategy.
Read many articles
about keyword research, but this keyword research guide really gave details and I learnt many new things.
This approach makes it easier to stand out and get noticed because you aren't restricted to writing
about keywords with high search volume.
Learning
about keyword analytics and coming up with buyer personas can help you get an idea which words your website is already ranking for and which ones searchers are using to find your website.
thanks for sharing great information
about Keyword Research Tools this article is very helpful.Recently I am using Google Keyword Planner.
You can also use Alexa to get some ideas
about the keywords driving traffic to a site.
It's less
about the keywords and more about the quality of the content.
OkCupid even did an entire blog post
about keywords and the terms.
Simple flah cards for students to get them thinking
about the keyword.
Used as a starter activity to get students thinking
about the keywords before they were used in the lesson.
Not sure you remember I tweeted out one of your blog post the other day
about keyword research.
I think you also made a couple of comments
about keyword research in a podcast interview I heard recently that seemed to suggest keywords weren't so important to you.
Lots of people will search for «mystery books,» for instance, but if there's 700,000 other books with that keyword, then people will have a hard time finding yours in particular, so think
about keywords that are used, but not overused, meaning keywords that are more specific to your content but not so specific that you too severely limit the amount of people searching for it.
Yes, keywords are a great tool that you have in your toolkit as an author, and so we actually, the approach that I always talk about when I talk
about keywords is I call it a 360 approach to keywords, and what I mean by that is you want to choose, and we'll talk in a moment about how to choose those keywords, how to identify the ones that will be most relevant, but so you want to choose a few words or phrases that apply to your book and that customer, your readers would use in searching for your title.
So as you alluded to, if you're thinking
about keywords and titles and product descriptions, you want to be focusing very specifically on your genre and your audience.
-LSB-...] Friedlander presents How Nonfiction Self - Publishers Can Become Keyword Naturals posted at TheBookDesigner.com, saying, «Learning
about keywords can help nonfiction authors -LSB-...]
Learning
about keywords and how they work is a great way to build your audience and sell more books.
I actually don't really worry
about the keyword stuff, but others swear by it, so I felt that it was important to mention here.
Think
about the keywords and phrases people that are interested in your book will use.
In the last post (question # 5), I talked about how I don't worry
about the keyword rankings for a particular title.
Topic Alert — Uncover what other people are writing
about your keyword topics by setting up alerts on those keywords.
A few years back, when indie authors everywhere were squawking
about keywords and claiming to have gotten sales by tweaking the categories and keywords on their books, I wasn't a firm believer.
First, let's talk
about keywords.
I'm not going to belabor the point
about keywords.
A successful thriller and non-fiction author himself, Stephenson writes
about keyword optimization, email marketing, and reader - focused promotion.
These guides will help you learn
about keyword targeting, how to reach your intended audience, on - page factors and more.
I drove the blog How to Blog a Book blog to a # 1 Google search engine page rank just by blogging the book, and I never worried
about keywords at all.
Hadn't thought
about keywords before though, and I like the going deep exercises.