How many keywords?
Sunday, August 31st, 2008You may well have received emails offering to get your website onto the first page of Google for your chosen keywords.
It sounds attractive but what business benefits would it give?
If you have ever analysed your sites web stats in detail you will have noticed the very wide range of search terms that have been used by visitors to find your site.
Often the most popular search term is your business name but then there may be hundreds or thousands of search terms that have given the site one or more visitors. In fact, for some sites most of the visitors come from search terms that have only been used once or twice that that month.
Even the most popular term might only give you 5 or 10% of the total number of hits.
Consider some examples. Will someone going on holiday search on ‘holiday’ or ‘vacation’ or ‘weekend break’ or ‘getaway’ or ‘honeymoon’ or perhaps they will search on the accommodation they require: ‘hotel’ or ‘apartment’ or ‘villa’. Alternatively they may focus on the type of holiday: ‘adventure’, ‘golf’, ‘white water rafting’ or the less energetic ‘city break’ or ‘beach’!
And then location: is it ‘Spain’ or ‘Costa Blanca’ or ‘Alicante’ or ’somewhere near Benidorm’ or ‘Mediterranean’ or the more vague ‘within an hours drive of Alicante airport’?
Therefore it is important that the site is optimised for a wide range of keywords.
When you review your site’s performance you should be able to find the site appearing on the first page of the search engines for many search terms not just a single keyword or phrase.
If you are using Google Adwords or other Pay per Click (PPC) advertising, the effect is less pronounced but similar. This is because the less effective keywords and phrases are switched off and therefore the traffic is channelled to fewer keywords. For example, for one client recently we generated 1200 clicks from 63 keywords, with the most popular keyword accounting for just 14% of the clicks.
If we had just focussed on the best keyword/key phrase we would have lost 86% of the site’s visitors.
In summary, for most websites there is unlikely to be a magic keyword or phrase that will generate large numbers of vistors.
People using the search engines use a huge variety of ways to express what they are looking for and the more of these options your site can respond to the more visitors it will generate.
