miércoles, 22 de agosto de 2012

How To Use Social Media For Keyword Research

SEO is dead!  Ok, not really, but I wanted to get your attention.  The truth is, SEO isn’t going anywhere, but it is changing.  You have heard it many times before, the internet changes so fast that we need to constantly learn and develop our skills.

So, in an attempt to keep updated on current trends and groundbreaking tools, we read, and read, and read.  In fact, we are always reading.  Despite all this reading, when was the last time you implemented major changes to your work flow?  This article is about change, and how it can help you as an SEO.  Oh yeah, we are also going to be talking about using social media for keyword research.

One of the big changes SEO is going through right now is its love/hate relationship with social media.  While I am not going to touch on the future of social media and its influence on SEO, I will say that social media is highly under-used.  Your Facebook account is worth more then the twice-a-week links you post on your timeline to promote your latest blog article.  Social media is the medium that our world uses to tell marketers what they like, and what interest them.  Here are four ways you can use social media for keyword research, and content creation.

Gather Keyword Volume

Most social media listening tools allow you to scrape keyword volume.  They give you two key benefits that Google’s keyword tool does not.  First, social media is real time, Google Analytics tools are delayed.  Secondly, social media scrapers will tell you HOW people are using the keywords (but we will talk about that benefit in the next paragraph.)  Topsy lets you specify the time frame, language, and social media source that you want to scrape.  I usually set the time frame to thirty (30) days, I set the language to english, and I set the source to twitter.  During my research for this article, I tested out a few different keywords and compared them to Google’s keyword tool.  I tested “pizzeria” to “pizza restaurant”, and “pizza joint”.  Both Google Keyword Tool and Topsy agreed that “Pizzeria” won out over the other two. This tactic is extremely helpful for local SEO research, because local keywords are usually too low-volume to register in Google’s Keyword tool.

See Your Keywords In Context

The second benefit to using social media for keyword research is that you can read how people are using your keywords.  Seeing a list of keywords sorted by global search volume, and their PPC competition is helpful, but it will not tell you how people are using that term.  Semantic keyword research has become a requirement in SEO.  It is not enough to find out how many people search for a given phrase, you need to know what they “mean” by that phrase.  For example, is someone searching for the word “sweet” looking for a sweet dessert, or a sweet car, or a sweet person, or are they looking for the band Sweet?  Social media will show you how people are talking about your target keywords.  If your website does not match the “intent” of a keyword, you will not rank for it.

Scrape Social For Content

This is my favorite use of social media scraping. Remember that the whole point of keyword research, is to define the best way to target users.  Well, social media shows you what users want.  Tools like UberSuggst, Social Mention and even search operators can help you do this.  Let’s go back to the Pizzeria example.  If you need to write content for a pizza menu (online or offline) use this site search  “amazing pizza” site:yelp.comThis will give you thousands of pages of user generated content from people talking about, and describing the best pizza they have ever tasted.  Take the time to sit down and read through the reviews, and than use those customer’s own words to describe the Pizza on your menu.

Go Fishing For Curators

Creating good content is not enough to drive traffic to your site.  You will also need to do a little outreach.  You can use tools like GoFish, and FollowerWonk (recently acquired by SEOmoz) to find people who are talking about your topic.  FollowerWonk will let you analyze the author bios of a specified users followers. You can use this to create target content that you KNOW people are going to be interested in. You can use Followerwonk in conjunction with Gofish. Once  you have decided what your twitter followers are interested in, drop the keyword into GoFish to find people who are currently talking about it.  Both of those tools will give you high-quality prospects of who will show interest in the content you plan to write.

Here is a list of social media tools that will help you with your keyword research:

Bryant Jaquez. Bryant is a search-marketing consultant and the owner of BrewSEO and RedFounder. He helps companies leverage their most valuable assets for dramatic and lasting effects on their revenue.


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