When you start an online shop, keyword strategy might seem less important. You’re selling products, right? So the product names are your keywords. While that might be true in a few cases, in most cases you need to focus on the keywords that describe the problem you/your products are solving for your customer. Selling sun protection? The problems you’re solving (or rather preventing) are among others sunburn and skin cancer, so these are your keywords as well. In this post, I’ll give you a practical approach on how to perform keyword research for your webshop.
After you’ve defined your position and found your niche, you must have a pretty good idea of the main keywords for your website. By putting some real effort in positioning your website, you unconsciously were thinking about what we like to call ‘long tail keywords’. You were thinking about how you could refine your product or better: product description to match a certain target market.
What is keyword research?
Let’s first explain the concept of keyword research. Keyword research can be defined as:
The activity you undertake in order to come up with an extensive list of keywords you would like to rank for.
Your keyword strategy follows that definition, as it consists of all the decisions you make based on that keyword research. This is where your search marketing starts: what do you do, explained in the language of your target market. It will help you come up with an extensive list of (long tail) keywords you’d like to rank for.
Keyword research consists of three steps:
Where we say keywords, we also mean keyphrases (more than one keyword in a search query, as in ‘search engine optimization’).
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Step 1: What is your mission?
We have gone into this before. The mission of your online shop consists of the ideas you have about your website and your company. For the moment, let’s not focus on if that mission statement will prove to be genius enough to sell to people. This also largely depends on the market you are in.
Some markets are highly competitive, with large companies dominating the search results. For instance, an online shop with illustrations for children would even have to compete with online giants like Disney. Did you know Disney is an online publisher as well? Blogs like babble.com attract thousands of readers per day. I can assure you that these companies have a bit more budget for marketing (and SEO) than a starting shop like yours might be. Competing in these markets is hard, ranking in these markets is hard. All the more reason to make a good decision on niches and positioning. And keywords, obviously.
Please note that if you decide on a specific long tail keyword, that doesn’t mean you can forget about the competitive keywords altogether. These need to be mentioned, or better need to have a role in your website as well. You can’t optimize for ‘low-cal chocolate cupcake’ without focusing on ‘cupcake’ and ‘chocolate cupcake’ as well.
Step 2: Making a list of keywords
Try to focus on what benefits you bring to the customer, not on what you are selling from your own point of view. Normally, that will give you keywords they will most likely to use in their Google searches as well. Or, as we say in our Content SEO eBook:
What will these people be looking for? What kind of search terms could they be using while looking for your amazing service or product? Ask yourself these questions and write down as many answers as you possibly can.
Keep your unique selling point, or your customer’s unique buying reasons in mind when drafting your list of keywords. Make sure these keywords fit your website.
If you need any help with finding the right keywords, please go read this post by Marieke about keyword tools you can use.
Step 3: create landing pages?
Now that you have found your main keywords, you need to make sure these are represented in the right way on your website. A commonly used way is to create a landing page per keyword.
A landing page is a page where your visitors “land” (arrive) from other sources, such as search engines or social media. So basically it’s a page that’s optimized to evoke a certain reaction from the visitor, such as buying a product or subscribing to a newsletter.
We did an article on this subject, which will help you understand how to set up a proper landing page.
Don’t forget to structure your pages!
You should create collections of pages that work together in Google. Creating one page containing all the keywords you came up with won’t get you visitors. There’s just too much competition on most keywords. You should create multiple landing pages and embed them in a structure that tells Google how those pages relate to each other. Joost wrote an excellent post on how to achieve that by creating cornerstone content and internal linking.
By the way, feel free to perform an exit-intend survey to ask your visitors what keyword they used to find your site, and if they found sufficient information about the topic. Oxfam uses a form like that:
This will give you great insights in what keywords you still have to improve for.
TL;DR
Want your shop’s pages to rank? Then you should carry out keyword research for your webshop! You can do keyword research in three steps:
Write down the ideas you have about your company, your website, your products and your customers. Narrowing down your business automatically forces you to think about (long tail) keywords.
Focus on keywords that your customers would use. Try to find out what their unique buying reason is. What problem does your product solve?
Write awesome content about your keywords, use nice imagery and a design that supports the message of that page.
To finish things off, create nice collections of pages and give these pages a logical place within your site structure.
So go and determine a keywords strategy for your webshop!
Or pose your question in the comments below.
: ‘Why should you focus on multiple keywords?’ »
Source:: SEO