The Quick and Easy Way to Really Understand Long Tail Keywords

The Quick and Easy Way
to Really Understand Long Tail Keywords

By James Gladwin (c) 2009
Article from SEO News March 19, Issue #262

Have you heard of the 80-20 rule? Well, an Italian economist called Pareto noticed that 80% of land in Italy was owned by 20% of the population. His work was taken up by others until it entered mainstream thinking. You’ve probably heard variations of what’s now become known as the 80-20 rule, or the Pareto principle. They go like this: we spend 80% of our time with 20% of our friends, or we wear 20% of our favorite clothes 80% of the time.More generally, of course, it is a common rule of thumb in business: e.g., “80% of your sales come from 20% of your clients.” In business, for example, Microsoft noted that by fixing the top 20% of the most reported bugs, 80% percent of the errors and crashes would be eliminated.

so far, so good. But what if you found out that - where your website is concerned - the Pareto principle didn’t hold up so well? That 80% of your major keywords only account for 20% of your sales? In other words, by focusing on a handful of major keywords you may be missing out on the ‘real’ keywords that prospective customers are actually using to find your product or service.

Most webmasters apply the 80-20 rule: that the top keywords provide 80% of the business, but in practice, this has proved to be the opposite. In other words, the keywords that are most sought after are actually rarely those that provide the most business.

Let me put it another way: your website is far more likely to receive most of its search engine visitors through an assortment of low-volume search queries instead of a small group of keywords. And this means that by focusing on identifying the keywords which receive a lower volume of search queries you will see a jump in the overall amount of prospective customers from, say, Google, to your website.

What are these keywords? And how will they improve my visitor traffic?

Well, these keywords have become known as Long Tail Keywords. “Long Tail” because they are phrases that are usually made up of more than three words. For instance: “Paint” is not long tail, but “Outdoor paint for wooden shed” is long tail. Or, take “shoes”: “Adidas running shoes” is almost there. But “Adidas running shoes for women” is a long tail keyword.

Can you see the difference between “horse training” and “quarter horse training products”? Here is another example: ‘Credít Cards’ is the general keyword but effective long tail keywords within this niche could include: ‘good low cost credít cards for nurses’, ‘credít cards for people with bad credít’, ‘credít cards with low interest’, ‘benefits of corporate credít cards’, and so on.

The core ideas about long tail keywords is that there is less competition for them, so it’s easier to get good search engine rankings, and also the fact that people who search certain long tail keywords are much more likely to be potential purchasers. By optimizing your website and delivering content to match these search queries you will be attracting visitors who are searching for specific product information using these and other related search phrases.

And there’s no doubt that long tail keywords are highly effective at attracting traffic. What’s more important, there are thousands and thousands of long tail keywords which no one or very few people are pinpointing and so can easily be utilised.

So here are four key reasons why you should consider using long tail keywords to optimize your website for search engines:

First, focusing on long tail keywords will slowly but surely lead to more search engine traffic because you will have many, many web pages indexed and ranked for specific phrases related to your products or services. This means higher visibility and so a greater volume of search engine traffic.

Next, long tail keywords lead to higher purchase ratios. Visitors who come to your site via long tail search queries are more likely to purchase or take up on affiliate programs. By focusing on these long tail phrases, you are actually zeroing in on a vast market of potential buyers.

Third, long tail keywords lead to higher page ranking because there is generally far less competition. There is so much more scope for variation when you start digging for the phrases that people actually use when they enter search terms.

Finally, using long tail keywords means that your sites have the potential for greater monetization. People who find your site because they used a search engine such as Google or Yahoo are high value for this reason: they are people who are looking for specific information. So they are highly likely to follow relevant advertisements or subscribe to your blog feed or ezine.

So here’s the nutshell: more long tail keywords equals more potential customers equals more likely sales. Good luck!

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Old and Broken

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Do Title’s Tags provide SEO benefit?

They appear on a link’ the same way as an ALT tag does for an image.

Do Link Title’s provide an additional SEO benefit?
Will the spider pick up the added keywords?

Typically you would use the title attribute on a link when the anchor text of the link does not properly describe the resource. In theory, this shouldn’t happen as your anchor text should be very descriptive of the linked resource, enough so that the user would not need a visual clue like that provided by the title attribute.

Some SEO’s use them, and others say they’re useless. There really is no way without one of the reps saying its true to say if the engines ignore them. Just because the information is not shown in the index, does not mean the engines aren’t using them. I’ve been using them for the last few years, and have very good results. My results may be becuase of everything else I do, but either way it’s not hurting rankings. So worse case is its not effecting it, best case is, it’s helping.

Either way, don’t let that stop you from adding a nice touch of usability to your site. They also make sense for blind people who use software that read webpages for them.

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SEO Tips Part 4 Semantic code

Search engines need to understand what your content is about in order to
rank you properly on search engines. Semantic code tends to improve your
placement on search engines, as it is easier for the search engine
spiders to understand. For example, say I want to have a title on a
page I could coded it like this:

<font size="6"><b>this is the page title</b></font>

This would make the title large and bold giving it the appearance of a
page title, but there is nothing that describes it as a title in the
code. This means a search engine spider is unable to identify this as
being the page title.

To write the same title semantically so that a search engine spider
understands that this is a title, you would use the following code:

<h1>this is a heading</h1>

The appearance of your heading can then be defined in your CSS without
interfering with your descriptive (semantic) HTML / XHTML code.

How to ensure a site uses semantic code?

There is no magic tool out there yet that can tell if your site has used
semantic coding. The only way to make sure is to look through the code
itself. Your best bet would be to ask the web design company if it uses
semantic coding when building websites. If you get a blank stare and they
start to change the subject, then you need to decide if you want to find
yourself a new web design company.

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SEO Tips Part 3 The Description Metatag

Just as your Keyword Tag is important for the search engines, so is your Description Tag. The Description Tag can contain as many characters as you like, but only a certain portion of it will get indexed and displayed by search engines. In my experience most search engines will display anywhere from 200 to 250 characters (this is including spaces). So it reasons that you will want to have the most important Keywords towards the beginning of the Description Tag.

Example of a Description Tag:

<META name=”description” content=”Description Here”>

Setting up the Description Tag:

I am assuming that you have made a list of the top 12 keywords for your site and have organized them in order of importance. For this example I am going to use my web site Jade and the 3 most important keywords.

  • Kelowna Web Design
  • Kelowna SEO
  • Kelowna 3D Animation

Now that I have my keywords selected I am going to create a sentence or two describing my web site using the keywords I have selected as the most important to my site.

“A Kelowna web design company Jade Arts provides services such as web design, website development, 3D animation, graphic design, and SEO.”

Optimizing the Description Tag:

Most search engines display the Description Tag in the search results. So it is very important that your Description Tag makes grammatical sense, and get searchers to click on your link. So making sure I keep my most important keywords close to the beginning I made a few edits and have come up with this;

“Jade Arts is a Kelowna web Design Company, which creates unforgettable web design. Jade Arts also offers 3D animation, graphic design, and SEO services.”

Not bad, and it only contains 149 characters and has Jade Arts 3 important keyword phrases included. We still need to add something to get the searcher to click on it. How about:

“Visit Jade Arts today and get a free Search Engine Optimization evaluation!”

Once we put the two together we have the following completed Description Tag:

“Jade Arts is a Kelowna web Design Company, which creates unforgettable web design. Jade Arts also offers 3D animation, graphic design, and SEO services. Visit Jade Arts today and get a free Search Engine Optimization evaluation!”

Our new tag is for our keyword phrases is around 225 characters in length, it describes Jade Arts accurately, and it hopefully will get searchers to click on the link.

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SEO Tips Part 2 The Keyword Metatag

Often times, people make the mistake of optimizing for very general keywords like DVD or Used Cars. Although these terms get a lot of traffic, it is very unlikely that you will be able to rank highly with them. Then even if you do get lucky and rank high with these keywords, the type of traffic you will get will give you very low conversion rates.

Why? Because they are not targeted prospects. You may get 700 hits per day but that does not guarantee that those 700 hits will buy anything. You need to get more specific with your keywords.

For example, if your web site is about luxury condo rentals, it would be much more beneficial for you to target the phrase “luxury condo rentals” rather than the extremely competitive keyword “condos.” It would be even better to target the phrase “[city or town name] luxury condo rentals .” This way you are now targeting a specific area or region and therefore will attract more renters than searchers.

The more targeted your keyword phrase, the more likely the visitors will be prospective renters. A person who types in “condos” may be looking for a condo to buy or just looking at the prices. This lends to useless traffic.

However, a person that searches for a specific area or region and is looking to rent knows exactly what they want and they are much further along in the renting process.

Once you have determined the best possible keyword phrases to target, you then can begin to optimize your page for those specific keywords.

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