Make Money Online

RAP Bank

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Long Tail Keywords For SEO

Many keywords are super hard to rank for if you're just starting out. Profitable niches like DUI lawyers is so competitive it doesn't make any sense to go after it — too many competing sites are out there looking to solve the problems faced by those charged with a DUI. Attorneys smell the cash from these people and so they devote a lot of time and effort to getting high rankings for their own sites.

Direct attacks make no sense in this scenario. The market is simply too blanketed to break into. Instead, you have to work the long tail. Long tail keywords will get you targeted traffic and higher rankings for much less money and effort.

A "long tail keyword" is a very focused search phrase consisting of at least 3 keywords. The really good long tail keywords consist of at least four or five keywords in them. The search volume for a long tail keyword is not very high, because it's so focused, but the traffic it generates is definitely very targeted.

A simple example to demonstrate the concept. According to Google's own keyword tool, the term DUI lawyers is searched for about 75,000 times a month. A search on Google shows that there are 6 million sites that match that phrase. Hard to compete against!

Make a long tail phrase by adding the name of a place to create the term Los Angeles DUI lawyers and you've drastically cut down competition — only about 400,000 sites match that term. The search volume is less, too — about 1500 searches per month — but it's a much more realistic market to break into. Good search engine optimization techniques are more likely to work with long tail keywords than high-volume, saturated keywords.

One problem with long tail keywords you need to target more keywords to make a real difference. It's a volume game — the more long tail keywords you rank for, the more traffic you'll get. This can require a lot of effort. Over time, though, you'll also find that your sites get better rankings for the main (short tail) keywords, a nice side effect of targeting long tail keywords.

No comments: