Thursday, 25 February 2010 12:13
We are working on search and conversion optimisation for a client (which in plain English means more traffic and more sales) and this has illustrated the importance of long tail keywords. (Also online directories but that's for another post!)
How do you take advantage of your long tail to get more traffic?
Most business owners, when thinking about getting more people to visit their site, think about search engine optimisation.
Which leads to keywords - ie what people 'Google' to find their products. Then they'll think about adding these words to their site.
But they will think of the most obvious keywords, such as 'Jewellery' if you are a jewellery shop. Trouble is, so does everyone else in their industry.
If you are in a competitive industry and have limited resource like many NZ small businesses, focusing on the long tail may be more economical in the long run. It means less traffic - but they will be of a higher quality and are more likely to result in an enquiry or a conversion. And the good news is most other website owners won't bother optimising for the long tail.
Head keywords or short tail keywords are usually the one or two words that are most commonly associated with a product such as 'watches' or 'jewellery' (if you are a jewellery shop).
Long tail keywords are typically 3 - 6 words in length so are really keyword phrases. They are the search phrases that have smaller search volumes i.e. not as many people use them.
They are phrases that are more specific like 'gold and platinum antique ladies watch' or 'green men's polo shirt large'.
People are increasingly using these terms to get more relevant search results - so you want to attract these people to your site.
To take advantage of your long tail it will come down to content - i.e. you'll need to use the keyword phrases you have identified, in your content.
The more content you have on your site in the form of product overviews, news or a blog, the easier it will be to include them.
We wouldn't recommend trying to stuff all the long tail keyword phrases into one page. You might increase traffic, but such obvious tactics will reduce your conversion rate. Not only that but Google frowns on this type of behaviour.
We also wouldn't recommend creating specific pages for each phrase, as you may not get the return for all that work.
Of course getting people to your site is one thing, you'll then need to test different content and calls to action to make sure the visitors convert to a sale.
Keep a record of the long tail keywords and track which ones get a result for you.
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