Blogging, SEO, web trends, google keywords and other geeky stuff.

Google Keywords Part 3: Ideas

Posted: February 6th, 2009 | Author: Agitationist | Filed under: Google keywords, blogging, tutorials | Tags: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Continuing our series on Google Keywords, today we’ll start assembling our list of potential targets.

Note: most information you’ll find on these techniques is about making money. The idea is to target Google keywords and then build a site around them, with the purpose of gaining traffic and raking in money. But I’m going to explain the reverse – taking the site you have, finding the right keywords to target, and optimizing your site so that people organically find your content. However, these techniques can be adapted to either goal. Perhaps in the pdf version I’ll explain the money-making aspect as well, but for now let’s just get an audience for your site.

Note for linguists: in this arena, the term “keyword” can apply to a word or phrase, although it is singular. For example, we refer to “Italian sports cars” as a “keyword”.

Now, having assembled the tools described in part two of this series, you’re ready to do your research. First, brainstorming:

  1. Open up a fresh spreadsheet (pen and paper will do if necessary, but we’ll want to sort the results later).
     
  2. Place your cursor in the first cell on the second row (leaving the top row open to place headings later).
     
  3. Imagine you are asked the question by a stranger: “What is your web site about?” Answer this question in a short phrase. For example, “victorian furniture”, “1970s punk rock”, or “the meaning of life”. Type it in the box and hit return to move down one cell. If you think of several answers, repeat this as many times as necessary.
     
  4. Imagine this stranger asks you to be more specific. Enter your answers, for example, “late victorian furniture”, “1970s New York punk rock”, or “the meaning of life in Greek philosophy”. Get creative with phrasing, and think of terms you mention frequently.
     
  5. Now try to get even more specific, like “pseudo-oriental Victorian”, “1970’s Greenwich Village punk”, or “Aristotlean Nicomachean ethics”. Try to keep these phrases as short as possible. Do this for a few minutes, but don’t spend too much time. This is just the beginning, and we’ll refine our choices later.
     
  6. Save your spreadsheet as “Google keywords” or the title of your choice.
     
  7. Open up your site and look around. Were your answers accurate? Are you really writing about what you thought you were? Add more entries to your spreadsheet if more answers strike you.
    Now we’re ready to start using our toolbox.
     
  8. Open Firefox. In the toolbar, look for the “Google keywords” folder you created in part two of this series. Click this once, scroll down and click “Open All in Tabs”. Numerous tabs will load, containing all of your research tools.
     
  9. Go to the first tab, the Google Search-based Keyword Tool. This is actually a tool for advertisers, but it suits our purposes very well. Copy the first keyword from your spreadsheet, and paste in the “word or phrase” text field. Click “Find keywords”.
  10. You may only get one or two results. If so, try removing a word from your query and clicking again. For example “late victorian furniture” returns one result, but “victorian furniture” returns 69.

    Look down the list and see if any of the results might be reasonable answers to the question “What is your web site about?” If so, these are possible Google keywords.

  11. Leave everything right where it is, and go to part four of this series, when published. There, we’ll talk about which of these are worth targeting and why.

Again please note this post is 600 words long, and mentions “Google keywords” six times.

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Google Keywords Part 2: Tools

Posted: February 4th, 2009 | Author: Agitationist | Filed under: Google keywords, blogging, tutorials | Tags: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

The next step in our continuing series on Google keywords consists of assembling the tools we’ll be using for research. This is very straightforward and easy, and we’ll be sticking with free tools, for those just getting started.

  1. Download Firefox. This is not a matter of personal browser preference; it’s the only browser compatible with the tools we’ll be using to research and refine our Google keywords. The fact that it’s also the best browser around is coincidental.
     
  2. Download the SEO For Firefox add-on. This browser extension will add all the research capabilities we need, and then some. Click “Install” when the dialog box opens, and then click “Restart Firefox” when you are given the option. When Firefox restarts, you’ll see an SEO icon in the lower right corner of the browser. Left- or control-click this, and choose “Options..”. 
     
          

    In the SEO for Firefox preferences, uncheck “Enable/Disable SEO For Firefox”. Yes, we want this disabled by default until we turn it on. We’ll be setting this to automatically pull some information, so if we leave it on for normal browsing, we risk having our IP banned. We can activate it with one click when we need it.

    For now, you can leave the next box, enable/disable of ‘nofollow’ links unchecked.

    Finally, in the “Mode” column, change “PR” and “Age” to “Automatic”. Everything else can remain as is. Close the Preferences window.

  3. In the top Firefox menu, click “Bookmarks > Organize Bookmarks..”. Click on “Bookmarks Toolbar”, and then in the drop-down menu above, choose “New Folder…”. Name this “Google keywords“, or the term of your choice. You’ll see the entry in your toolbar. If you don’t, click “View > Toolbars > Bookmarks Toolbar”.
     
  4. Navigate to each of the following sites (it will be easiest to open the page you’re reading now in Firefox, so the links open there). Upon reaching each one, click “Bookmarks > Bookmark This Page”. In the dialog box, look for “Folder”, and click the down arrow, choose the “Google keywords” folder you made in the previous step, and click “Done” to add the bookmark to that folder.Go to each of these pages, and bookmark into the new folder:

    Google Search-based Keyword Tool
    Google AdWords Keyword Tool
    Google Search (with quotation marks)
    Wordtracker GTrends
    Keyword Difficulty Check Tool
    SEO Book Keyword Tool
    Nameboy Domain Name Generator
    Ontology Finder – Related Keywords Lookup Tool
    Synonym.com  

    We’ll only be using Nameboy if we happen to need a domain name, but it’s good to have it in there just in case.

  5. Finally, you will need to keep track of your research. I highly recommend using a spreadsheet program. There are a variety of them out there, including free, open-source choices. You won’t need to be a wizard with them for our purposes. All we’ll be doing is some entering and sorting.

That’s it for today. Next time, down to business.

Note: this post is exactly 500 words, and mentions “Google keywords” five times. Are you getting the idea?

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Google Keywords Part 1: Introduction

Posted: February 3rd, 2009 | Author: Agitationist | Filed under: Google keywords, blogging, tutorials | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

After some deliberation, I’ve decided to write a series about how to research and use Google keywords. Quite frankly, I was unsure whether to share this information. But I don’t think something so simple should be reserved for a circle of web “gurus” who happened to stumble upon it, when everyone else could be benefitting. So I’m going to explain the research and use of Google keywords in the most straightforward way possible, for anyone who wants it. Eventually I’ll boil it down into a more formal “course” format, and put it up here as a pdf, but for now let’s just get it out there.

This series will be intended for the non-techie audience, so I’ll explain the terms I use in detail, in case you’re not familiar. If you are a tech type, please bear with me while I define them for the rest of the class. However, you may just learn something you don’t know, so try and stay awake.

Ready, class? Then we’ll begin.

“Write about what you know.” It’s one of the most often repeated axioms of blogging, and writing in general.

Unfortunately on the web it’s not that simple. If “what you know” is something 10,000,000 other people are writing about too, no one will ever see your writing, and your efforts will be only for your own enjoyment.

You can be proud of your efforts all day long, and sit back enjoying your beautiful handiwork, but at some point it feels pretty empty if no one else ever sees it. And if you’re trying to promote a business of any kind, attaining an audience is the difference between putting food on the table and hitting the bread line.

First the bad news: Even if what you’re writing about only has a handful of competitors for people’s attention, if you come up at the bottom of Google’s search results, you’re out of luck. You simply will not get in front of an audience. If you’re writing the best site ever about “excellent wines of France”, but everyone is searching Google for “great French wines”, all the expertise in the world won’t put you at the top of the search results and get people to see your work.

Now the good news: with a little research into Google keywords, you can make some minimal adjustments and vastly improve your search engine performance.

The basic concept here is to find out what your desired audience is looking for, and make sure you show up right in front of their face when they do.

So why “Google keywords”?

Though I’m using the brand name “Google”, this really refers to any search engine. Google simply happens to be the ubiquitous tool at this point in time, so I’m using it as a term of convenience. But you can be sure that if you’re successful optimizing for Google keywords, you’ll have little difficulty in Yahoo, MSN Live, or anywhere else.

OK, why “keywords”?

Everything that happens on the web is driven by keywords. They are the fuel the Internet runs on. Unless you happen to simply jump from link to link and never use a search engine, you’re using keywords every time you open a browser. And so is everyone else. If you want a whole lot of those eyes on your page, the best way is to optimize your site’s Google keywords. I’ll explain them in depth as this series continues, and we’ll pick them apart pretty thoroughly.

How is this different from SEO?

I said this was for non-techies, so your question is out of line, buddy. However, SEO (search engine optimization) is part of the method I’ll show you, but we’ll be going further. We will use aspects of SEO, but in some ways we’ll be doing the opposite: reverse-engineering SEO, if you will. 

OK, before we get too far into buzzwords, let’s end class for today. Before leaving your desk, please note that this post is exactly 700 words long, and that I’ve used the term “Google Keywords” exactly seven times. The significance will become evident as we continue.

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