Finding Your Niche Using Keywords
Using keywords to help find your niche in a competitive
market is a "must". Make certain the keywords you identify
really tell your potential customers what it is that you
are offering. If you are selling a certain kind of widget
having a particular characteristic, look for keywords that
describe this characteristics that people might be
interested in. The more precise you can be, the better your
chances are of finding the angle for you to enter the
market place. By using too general of a keyword, you will
have too much competition. It becomes very difficult to be
listed high enough in search results for anyone to see you,
let alone to be listed within the top ten search results
for that keyword.
Most keyword-search software tells you how many searches
have taken place for each particular keyword that you
enter. Depending on which keyword software you use
determines whether you need to use a multiplier to obtain a
more accurate look at the number of searches done for that
keyword.
An example of this is results from Overture. For Overture
results, multiply the results anywhere from 5 to 7 times. I
use 5, which gives me a conservative number to work with.
The more searches that a keyword has, the more popular that
keyword is.
There is more to look at than just the total number of
searches a keyword has had for that month. Determining how
many web pages are competing for the same keyword is also
necessary. If there is too much competition, it becomes a
very hard niche to have any kind of presence. Most keyword
software gives you what the competition is for each keyword
that displayed in their results box. Obviously, a higher
number of searches and a lower number of competitors give
you a better chance of being listed within the top ten
spots on the search engines.
What is the effectiveness of your keywords you have chosen
to use on your website? More information is needed to
determine this. This is where KEI (Keyword Effectiveness
Index) comes in to play.
KEI is a mathematical algorithm formula developed by Roy
Sumathumtia to determine the probability of successfully
using a keyword to grow a business. Here is how it is
calculated: square the popularity of a keyword and multiply
it by 1,000. Now divide that number by the number of sites
that shows up in AltaVista for that keyword.
Very few keyword-searching programs actually use this
formula. Although, in my experience, keyword software
programs that do use it have proven to be invaluable in
finding niches and narrowing them down to products that the
consumer is looking for. When you are looking for your
keywords while using software with a KEI, as a rule of
thumb, look for keywords with a KEI number over 100 with
less than 1,000 pages of competition. The number of
competing sites is a very flexible number, and you can
adjust it up or down depending on how well you know your
particular niche. The higher the KEI number is over 100,
the higher the effectiveness of that keyword. The lower the
number of competing sites, the easier it is going to be to
get your web pages ranked among the top ten sites, if not
number one. Another consideration is how many
searches in a month the keyword had. In this case, the
higher the number the better. If this number is too low, it
will not be worth your while to use that particular keyword.
What you are looking to do here is to take your top three
keywords and add together the number of searches they
received for a month. This gives you some idea of what kind
of traffic is possible by using those keywords. Rank your
keywords in order of importance. This helps you maintain
focus on your primary goal.
About the Author:
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Copyright 2006 Larry Lang All Rights Reserved. Lang
Enterprises Inc.
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