Use “Keyword Researcher” to discover high-value Long-Tail Keywords from Google AutoComplete, Organize CSV files from the Google Keyword Planner, and write SEO-Optimized Articles for your website.
Have you ever wondered how to find Long Tail Keywords for your website? When you use Google, you may notice a little drop-down box that represents their attempt to predict what you’re about to type next.
For example when I type the phrase “How does a website…” then Google assumes I might be looking for:
- How does a website make money
- How does a website work
- How does a website find my location
- How does a website server work
- how does a website help a business
These are some interesting keywords…
Wouldn’t it be great if there was a way to save all these keywords–so we could add them to our website content?
Well that is where Keyword Researcher comes in!
Keyword Researcher is an easy-to-use Keyword Discover Tool. Once activated, it emulates a human using Google Autocomplete, and repeatedly types thousands of queries into Google. Each time a partial phrase is entered, Google tries to predict what it thinks the whole phrase might be. We simply save this prediction. And, as it turns out, when you do this for every letter of the alphabet (A-Z), then you’re left with hundreds of great Long Tail keyword phrases.
Do you need to Organize Keywords and Import CSV Files from the Google Keyword Planner?
Would you like to manage keywords, and article content? Planning a Web Content Strategy?
If you have ever used the infamous Google Keyword Planner, then you need to check out Keyword Researcher! And, get ready to say goodbye to the tedium of manually manipulating CSV files–in complicated Microsoft Excel spreadsheets.
Our app was built by Internet Marketers, for Internet Marketers.
It was designed (from the ground up) to be an all-in-one SEO solution–that allows you to manage both your keywords and website articles.
- Need to manage thousands of keywords?
- Need help writing SEO-Optimized website articles?
- Want to organize an entire SEO website?
Then read on, and get ready to turn confusing keyword data into valuable information.
As Internet Marketers, we all understand the value of working with clear and concise keyword data. If you’ve ever done any SEO at all, then you’re already familiar with the Google Keyword Planner–Google’s amazing keyword tool that spits out heaps of great keyword data. It’s the “first-stop” for ANY online SEO marketing campaign.
You’ve probably downloaded CSV files from the Keyword Planner, and perhaps worked with them in a spreadsheet program like Microsoft Excel.
- Perhaps you’ve tried to separate the good keywords from the bad keywords.
- Perhaps you’ve tried to organize your keywords into logical groups.
- Perhaps you’ve tried to create SEO-optimized documents for your website, and found that, squeezing all these keywords into your articles can be a bit tricky.
And that’s where the problem starts!
For years, I spent hours doing manual Keyword Research with various keyword tools. This was eating up a lot of valuable time! Trying to sort, segment, and make sense of a list of a thousand keywords takes forever. Not to mention, trying to organize this data into a concise keyword research report that would make sense to a client.
If you’ve ever spent five minutes trying to sort keyword data in Microsoft Excel, then you know how difficult working with large keyword lists can be!
Keyword Researcher can turn a list of thousands of keywords, into an actionable SEO Strategy. We designed it to make the entire SEO process flow smoothly–from keyword generation, to content publishing, and all the steps in between. We’ve tried to think of everything!
Keyword Researcher is free to try out! So click the above download button to get the free trial version today!
Testimonials
Yes, these are real pictures of real human beings who
really like Keyword Researcher.
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The 6 Foundational Steps of SEO
This is where Search Engine Optimization begins.
Discover and Import Keywords |
Remove the Bad “Junk” Keywords |
Search for the Good Keywords |
Organize the Good Keywords into Article Groups |
Type the Good Keywords into your Webpage Article Content |
Publish Your Content Online |
Step 1: Discover and Import KeywordsIn this step, you can use our app to discover new keywords about your product or service. You can also import keyword CSV files from the great Google Keyword Planner With Keyword Researcher, this step is easy. Simply drag the CSV files into the app, and all of your keyword data is sorted for you. Duplicates are removed. And the incoming keywords (that you have “blacklisted” in the past) will, of course, be blacklisted again. So they won’t interfere with your project. |
Keyword Researcher Screenshots
Yes, this is what Keyword Researcher looks like.
Keyword Researcher
List of Features
Search GoogleSearch for Long Tail Keywords on Google. |
Search AmazonSearch for Long Tail Keywords on Amazon. |
Search YouTubeSearch for Long Tail Keywords on YouTube. |
Write SEO-Optimized ContentUse the “Create Content Tab” to write web content and insert the high-value Keywords. |
Plan a Content StrategyAssign your Keywords to Articles, and sort your Articles into Categories. |
Negative Keyword ListA good Negative Keyword List will ensure that undesirable Keywords don’t interfere with your project. |
Advanced Keyword SearchWhen you have 1000’s of Keywords, you need advanced searching functions to make sense of them. |
Assign your Keywords to a White, Grey, and Black ListGroup Keywords into multi-colored lists to keep your project nice and organized. |
Keyword TagsCreate custom Keyword Tags and assign them to your favorite Keywords for better sorting. |
Import Google Keyword Planner FilesDrag your Google Keyword Planner CSV files right into your project. |
Import from Microsoft ExcelImport Keywords and Article Content via Microsoft Excel (XLS) files. |
Export to CSV and XLSYou can export your Keywords and Content to many formats, including CSV, XLS, and even a WordPress XML file. |
Table of Contents
Content Strategy Basics
Create and deploy keyword-optimized content.
1. What is a Content Strategy and why is it important?
If you’ve ever wondered how Google is able to find the best webpage for your search query, the short answer is this:
They compare the words you type, with the words that appear in their database of all the websites of the Internet.
Basically, Google has downloaded the text of almost every website in the world. And they have organized these sentences into a large database. So, when you search Google, their computers crawl through this database and fetch the URLs of the websites that contain your search words.
This is, of course, an overly-simplistic summary of what’s really going on. Search engines are much more sophisticated these days, and the mere presence of the word on the web page is only one factor in determining search rank.
Still, you can see why SEO (Search Engine Optimization) is taken so seriously. Because, in the least, a web page that does not contain the user’s keywords, is less likely to actually be about the user’s keywords.
So when we refer to the creation of a “Content Strategy,” this typically entails the development of a group of keyword-optimized information articles.
- First, the SEO guy (sometimes pretentiously called the “Content Strategist”) will examine a body of keyword data, and select the keywords which he feels are conducive to the marketing of the product that the website caters to.
- Then, a lot of time, money, and effort are attributed to “Content Writers” (“Content Developers”) who create articles that satisfy (or partially satisfy) the spirit of the user’s search query.
Such content is created for a couple reasons:
- In a product-based web business model (e.g. a company selling baby toys or video courses), the site owner hopes that a visitor will serendipitously stumble upon his website, and, will be so impressed by the images, video, or content that he will ultimately become a paying customer.
- In an advertising web business model (e.g. a magazine or blog), the site owner hopes to attract as many visitors as possible to his website. Because he knows that some percentage of these visitors will view an advertisement or (even better) click on an ad. The more clicks our site owner gets, the more money he makes.
2. Finding Keywords
Of foundational importance in the creation of a content strategy is the generation of list of keywords that people are actually searching for on the internet. This usually means starting your journey at the infamous Google Keyword Planner and typing various “seed keywords” into its search box.
If you’re not familiar with the Google Keyword Planner, it’s a web interface (owned by Google of course) that allows you to download a body of keyword data (in the form of CSV files). These files contain a wealth of important information like:
- The Keyword Search Volume (The number of times the keyword is queried per month)
- The Keyword Cost-Per-Click (The approximate amount that an Adwords publisher is paying–when his ad is displayed for this keyword.
So you can see why this information if valuable. Because, thanks to the Google Keyword Planner, we can actually see:
- What types products or services people are searching for
- The exact phrasing that people are using to search for products or services
- And, how many people are searching for these products or services
Working with a large batch of CSV files from the Google Keyword Planner can be tricky. And that’s why Keyword Researcher was invented. It takes in all this great keyword data, and consolidates it into workable database.
3. Selecting the right keywords for your website.
So how do you know which keywords to use?
This is one of the most difficult questions in SEO. And the answer is different for every business model.
Simply put, you should use keywords on your website that are conducive to the marketing of your product or service. Ultimately, the keyword-selection task is much easier if you have a deep understanding of your target demographic–prior to ever sitting down to look at a keyword spreadsheet.
But once you’ve gathered all your keywords together, it is sometimes best to try to “put yourself in the shoes” of the person who has just typed this phrase into Google.
You might start out by asking yourself:
- Does the product or service I sell solve this person’s problem?
- Am I the answer to this person’s question?
- Do I personally know how to answer this user’s question?
- Can I ascertain what this user is looking for, based on the keyword phrase itself?
- Can I create content for this query that will leave the user satisfied that they have completed their search successfully?
- Do I have experience with people asking this question?
There is, of course, no perfect algorithmic method for deciding which keywords you will ultimately target in your web content. So if you’re just starting out in your Search Engine Marketing efforts, you might want to start small. Simply pick a dozen keywords and create a few articles that genuinely cater to the searcher’s needs.
4. Plan a Content Strategy and Cluster your keywords.
After you’ve chosen a batch of keywords to target, it’s time to assign these keywords into distinct article groups.
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