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Sunday, October 09, 2005

Doing keyword research with SearchIt! free research tool
Last Sunday I started a series on the different kinds of Internet marketing research you can do with the free SearchIt! research tool, which is, in my opinion, one of the most versatile research tools around. Last Sunday I looked at using SearchIt! to find incoming links. This week I'll look at using it to do keyword research.

The SearchIt! free search tool consists of a window with two dropdown boxes and two text boxes. In the two dropdown boxes, you select the type of search you want to do. In the two text boxes, you select the search criteria (such as keywords or URLs) you want to use.

Rather than repeat the introductory info about SearchIt! that I shared last week, I suggest that you see last Sunday's blog for this information. Or simply realize that it is important to click all the links and read all the instructions that SearchIt! tells you to do.

Seriously, you'll find SearchIt! A LOT easier and more valuable to use if you do that.
I'll start out by saying that I do the bulk of my keyword research on Wordtracker rather than SearchIt!. Wordtracker provides information on what keyword variations people are using to search, how frequently people search for each keyword variation, and how many pages compete for the same keywords. In other words, it provides the full package of keyword research information.

But Wordtracker charges for accesss to their database. While I'm happy to spend my money on this valuable service instead of spending extra time piecing together keyword research information from different sources, I know some people take the opposite view.
If you're one of them, SearchIt! gives you a lot of options for using free tools that give you parts of the keyword research equation. So here's some of the ways you can do keyword research for free with SearchIt!

Using SearchIt!
Many of SearchIt!'s keyword research options are familiar ones, but the advantage of using them through SearchIt! is that you have all these tools in one place.

SearchIt! keyword research options are divided into three categories:


Brainstorming tools help you compile a list of relevant keywords for your site, or check monetization options.

Competition tools help you determine how much competition your have for those keywords.

Where Are They? tools help you find how well optimized your competitors are.

That said, let's look this week at the Brainstorming tools that SearchIt! provides.

How to use SearchIt! for keyword brainstorming
In the Step 1 dropdown box, select Brainstorming.

Click the dropdown box for Step 2: Select Search Type. You'll see a long list of options. About half of them, though, are country-specific versions of the Yahoo!/Overture Keyword Selector Tool, a good tool for finding well-searched variations of your keywords and assessing the relative amount of searches for them.


Besides the various Yahoo! Keyword Selector Tools, your options include the following:


(Note: These options may change. The SiteSell people (who maintain the SearchIt! tool) are constantly adding new search tools to it.)

Yahoo! Keyword Selector Tool
Let's start by looking at the Yahoo! Keyword Selector Tool.

Keep in mind, though, that the Yahoo! Keyword Selector Tool is notorious for exaggerating the number of searches done for commercial keywords. A large number of webmasters search its database (like we're talking about doing right now) to research keywords rather than to find products to buy.

So don't take their numbers as a literal representation of how many people are trying to find products related to those keywords. Use them instead to get an idea of the variations of keywords that searchers use and how frequently they use each in comparision to others.

If you've never used the Yahoo! Keyword Selector Tool before, this is how it works. Type your basic keyword into the Step 3 box in SearchIt! and click the SearchIt! button (no need to type anything in the Step 4 box for this search). After reading the information page that appears after you click the button, click the link to see your results.

The Yahoo! Keyword Selector Tool appears with your results. It shows you keyword variations that were searched most frequently in the past month and how many times they were searched. This should give you a good starting point for developing your keyword list.

Google AdWords Keyword Tool
This option can supplement the keywords you find from the Yahoo! Keyword Selector Tool. Instructions for using it are the same as what you do with the Yahoo! tool. It draws its data from the Google AdWords database of keywords. It doesn't tell you the number of times each variation was searched, but it adds another handy wrinkle.

When your results appear, scroll down to the two columns labeled More Specific Keywords and Similar Keywords. The More Specific Keywords column lists keywords that contain the keyword you searched. The Similar Keywords column contains keywords that don't contain your keyword, but are similar to it.

This allows you to expand your keyword list with keywords that may fit your product, but that you may not have thought of. You can then do a search on those keywords in the Yahoo! or Google tools to find further appropriate keywords.

Related Keywords option
This tool is strictly for finding keyword variations that contain your keyword. It gives you no info on how frequently these variations are searched. You need to check any promising keywords in the Yahoo! option or in the SiteBuildIt! Brainstormer tool (which is part of the SiteBuildIt! website-building package), or in Wordtracker to get any idea of how frequently people search these keywords.

Thesaurus Synonym Generator option
This tool is strictly for finding synonyms. It can give you some synonyms for single word keywords, but I've found it pretty useless for most multiple-word phrases.

Amazon Books and Other Products option
This one is better suited for ideas on what kind of content people are looking for than for adding keywords to your list. Your results will show you what books match those keywords. These titles (and the chapters titles when you click on the book and then use the Search Inside This Book option that Amazon provides) can give you ideas for what kind of content would interest your visitors.

Or you can use the Refine Your Search option in the left column of the Amazon results page to get ideas about related products or catalogs.

The eBay Collection
This again is more of a monetization tool than a keyword research tool. It can help you see what kind of products people are selling related to your keywords.

WiseNut Search Extension
WiseNut lists related categories at the top of your search results. You may find some of these categories useful keywords. And you can click on the Search This link next to each category to see what categories WiseNut suggests for that keyword as well. Actually, you can keep doing this until you reach a point of diminishing returns.

SurfWax (Out-Of-The-Box!)
This one's a little different and is kind of hit-or-miss. Instead of typing your keyword in the Step 3 box, type a competitor's domain name. Your results will show some interesting info about your competitor's site. But the key is to scroll down to the Site's Focus Words section. It contains a list of the most commonly used words and phrases in your competitor's site. Sometimes you can get some great ideas from this tool. Sometimes not.

Patent Office Head-Knocker
Here's another hit-or-miss tool, suited more to developing product ideas than to keywords. It searches patent offices worldwide for patent applications that contain your keyword. I doubt you'll find many useful keywords from this, but you may get a better idea of what solutions are out there for the problem your keyword addresses.

Next week
This Sunday, I've covered just the keyword brainstorming tools that SearchIt! provides. Next Sunday, I'll show the tools it has for gauging competition for your keywords.

All in all, SearchIt! can find you lots of keywords and much other valuable information. The main thing to remember is to READ THE DIRECTIONS. With as many tools packed into this one interface, you're not going to take one look at it and intuitively understand how to use every one of them. But the directions they give are easy, and they do more than just tell you how to use each tool; they also throw in tips on how to use the results you receive to make your site more successful.

SearchIt! is one of these free tools that really produces value for you. I recommend that you check it out and make it a part of your web marketing arsenal.
Jeff

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