How to Identify Quality Keywords
Before we dig into keyword research, we need to make sure our overall content strategy is formulated for success.
The Foundations of Keyword Research
“Step 1: Buy a comic book shop. Step 2: Buy a big bag to put the money in.” – Sheldon Cooper
Ahh, if only it were that easy…
Unless you are Sheldon Cooper, people aren’t always going to show up on your site and become a customer with the snap of a finger. Now more than ever, consumers play the role of careful researcher and need time and information to move through the purchasing funnel.
The keywords that we select to include within our content need to be varied and speak to a number of different audiences. If they aren’t chosen with care, they won’t attract leads and buyers at every stage of the decision-making process.
One of the greatest benefits of compelling content is that it can speak to people at all stages of the purchasing funnel. You can have pages optimized for keywords targeting people ready to buy (“credit card in hand”) and other pages optimized for people at the very top of the funnel who are conducting research on your industry. They are all uniquely valuable visits for your business, and the best vehicle to drive these people to your site is content.
Planning Your Content Strategy to Match Your Funnel
When you are planning out your content strategy for your website, make sure to leave room for pages that will specifically target each level of the purchasing funnel. We’ll get into how you can identify quality keywords for all of these groups of people shortly, but here’s how a sample of pages might end up looking like for a lawyer’s website:
Top of Funnel:
- When Do You Need A Divorce Attorney?
- What Do Divorce Attorneys Do?
Middle of Funnel:
- Guide On Selecting The Right Attorney For You
- 15 Things To Look For In A Divorce Attorney
Bottom of Funnel:
- Cost of Representation: How Much Does a Divorce Attorney Cost?
- Best Divorce Attorney In Florida
Each of these articles attracts a unique set of people to the page with different inherent needs. By remaining mindful of the purchasing funnel and doing careful keyword research, you can make sure that your website speaks to each of these groups effectively.
Before starting to identify specific keywords that you want to target with your website, come up with a list of “buckets” from the purchasing funnel that keywords will fall into. There is no universal way to do this but the simplest approach would be to use two keyword buckets: informational queries and transactional queries.
Each of these buckets can help provide a roadmap for the keyword research process and make sure that your site has a balance of different types of content.
Diving Deep Into Keywords
There are a number of free keyword research tools out there that you can use to uncover hidden gems for both buckets of the purchasing funnel. They will help you identify quality keywords more easily. If you are going to use these two buckets to guide your content strategy, plan on doing content based on a mix of 50% informational keywords and 50% transactional ones. This will give you a good balance and keep your strategy equally focused on long-term and short-term prospects.
Informational Queries
For these top-of-funnel queries, a good rule of thumb is to answer common questions that people have about your industry. Informational queries are often done in the form of questions: What is a widget? How do widgets work? When do I need a widget?
These types of keywords aren’t likely to result in lots of direct revenue, but they introduce people to your brand and can drive lots of first-time visitors to your website. As they move through the purchasing funnel, these visitors become more valuable, and your website will (hopefully) be the first place they think of when they reach the middle and bottom of the funnel and are ready to make a purchase.
To uncover keyword for informational queries, find where people are asking questions and participating in conversations online. My favorite sites to identify quality keywords are UberSuggest and Quora. I like both of these sites because the topics and suggestions are 100% user-driven. UberSuggest pulls keywords from real Google searches and Quora has a massive warehouse of user-generated content.
Find common topics and write helpful, information-packed guides that answer the questions people are asking. This will drive traffic through new keywords and position your brand as an industry leader.
Continuing our theme, here are a few keywords and discussion topics I found about divorce attorneys after only a few minutes of searching:
- How Do I Know If A Divorce Attorney Is Good?
- What Are The Common Problems Faced By Divorce Attorneys?
- What should I do if I caught my wife cheating on me?
- In a divorce would I have to be ordered to pay off my spouse’s debt?
- In your experience, who pays more for divorce, men or women? Please include any objective info or stats.
- Legal Issues and Law in Everyday Life: Should you have a prenuptial agreement in place before getting married?
Transactional Queries
These people have done their research, know what they want, and are ready to make a decision about which business to work with. In terms of value per visit, this bucket is your real money maker. If you aren’t speaking to this audience, you are in trouble.
Searchers who are ready to sign up or purchase today have a renewed sense of urgency in the queries that they typically use. Google’s Keyword Planner tool is a great way to pull in some specific keywords for this bucket.
You can use Google’s estimated Cost Per Click to determine how much commercial intent (that is, intent to make a purchase)and long-term value is behind each click. If somebody searches for “find divorce lawyer” the CPC is $30.87, whereas a broader, more informational search for “divorce lawyer” comes in at $19.61. The higher CPC keywords should be your main focus in this stage of keyword research. That’s where the most value can be found. Manually type in some queries or plug in a competitor’s website into Google Keyword Planner to start generating ideas.
I spent five minutes pulling in some sample transactional keywords for our fictitious law firm again. Here’s what I came up with:
- Best divorce attorney
- Family divorce attorney
- Find divorce attorney
- Cost of a divorce attorney
- Low-cost divorce attorney
- Price of divorce
- Best divorce lawyers
- Best divorce lawyer in {location}
After just a few minutes, you can grab hundreds of keywords from the Keyword Planner that people are searching. These are people who are ready to become new clients of our fictitious law firm. You absolutely need pages on your site that are devoted to increasing your visibility in search engines based on these keywords.
Keywords = Marketing Keystones
Keyword research can be tricky, but if you come up with an overall content strategy and stick to it, you’ll be well on your way to successfully marketing your website in search engines.
It is easy to get caught up in the bells and whistles of other marketing tactics, but few activities will provide the long-term ROI of solid keyword research and content creation.
Take some time to use the tools and strategies highlighted above to carefully identify quality keywords for your business and implement them.
Over the course of a few years, a simple informational content page can speak to thousands of potential prospects, and a well-targeted transactional page can close more deals than a thousand cold calls ever will.