Number of Search Results is a Poor Keyword Competitiveness Metric
By: Jeremy Biberdorf
Submitted: 2009-04-17 13:59:39 | Word Count: 827
Too many amateur internet marketers make the mistake of relying on number of search results as a metric of how competitive a keyword is. This is a big mistake that can lead to targeting keywords that are too competitive. As a result, you may either never get decent rankings or it might take a very long time to rank well.
Do You Really Care About Every Competitor?
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When you enter a search term in Google, it brings back every webpage that is somehow relevant for that search term. Those webpages either have those words on their page or they have links with those words in their link anchor text. There will be a wide variety of website types, from multi-billion dollar companies to small personal websites. Not all of them are even targeting that keyword though.
Some of those webpages may have merely mentioned that keyword in their page content, without bothering to optimize the page around that phrase. The keyword might not be in key page locations such as the page title, meta tags and headers. These webpages might be targeting a completely different keyword or no specific keyword at all. It doesn't matter how many webpages like this exist, as passing them in the search rankings may be as simple as putting the keyword near the beginning of your title tag. These are not serious competitors. Depending on your keyword, fifty percent or more of the search results could be sites like this.
The next step up is websites who managed to put the keyword in important spots on their page, but didn't get any links targeting that phrase. These sites are just relying on on-page factors that won't get them very high in the rankings. To pass these websites in the rankings, you usually just need a few good links using the keyword as anchor text. Sometimes these pages are relying on the strong link profile of their domain. Unless that is a very strong domain, you can easily pass these websites too.
Which Competitors Actually Matter?
The competitors that actually matter are the ones who aggressively target the keyword through both off-page and on-page efforts. These are the well-optimized websites that know what is involved in getting to the top of search engine results. They are whom you would be competing with for page one rankings. Some of these websites may not have optimized their page very well for the keyword, but their links might be compensating for that.
In most cases, the competitors that you have to worry about are the ones already ranked on the first page. If you're not on page one of the search results, you simply won't get much traffic from that keyword. For a very high volume keyword, you might get some traffic on page two, but most of those people would've already visited your competitors on page one. To really go after a keyword, you should be aiming for top 3 rankings. The higher in the rankings you are, the more traffic you will get and the more conversions you will make.
So How Do We Properly Measure Keyword Competition?
Instead of simply checking the number of search results, there are better ways to check how competitive a keyword is. Some keyword tools list a KEI (Keyword Effectiveness Index) score for competition level. Unfortunately that is merely the search volume divided by the number of search results. So it is just as ineffective as just looking at the number of results.
To get a quick gauge of how competitive a keyword is, you can try using Google search commands such as inanchor and intitle. These commands will tell you how many webpages use that keyword in their title or in the link anchor text. Use them together in the same search to see how many sites are actively targeting that keyword through links and on-page optimization. Unfortunately this only tells you the number of active competitors. Among those active competitors, there may be a lot of websites with only several links or websites who have not optimized their entire page for that phrase.
For a more detailed competition analysis, you need to take a good look at the top ten websites. You should be checking how many links those websites have, both to their homepage and to the specific ranked page. Then check how strong those links are. Analyze the PageRank of their links, the relevancy of the link pages, the number of links per page and the usage of the keyword in their link anchor text. Also analyze those competitors for on-page factors such as their keyword use throughout the page.
Doing this kind of analysis manually can be quite time consuming. To speed up the process you might want to install the SEO for Firefox browser add-on. This will display useful stats about each website within your search results. You may also want to use paid software such as SEO Elite to fully analyze a website's links. This will provide a very detailed breakdown of what kind of links they have and what keywords they are optimized for.
Conclusion
If keyword competition level is important to your marketing efforts, you need to ensure you are going about it correctly. The search engine optimization industry is full of misguided advice. Many people still tell you to check the number of search results, but this is a poor recommendation. Checking competition levels all comes down to determining just how strong the top ranked websites are. Although it sounds nice to say you outrank millions of competitors, in reality you are only trying to outrank the top ten websites.
Author Resource:-
Jeremy Biberdorf is an internet marketing professional with over 10 years of experience. Check out his website for effective keyword research. If you'd rather handle keyword research yourself, check out these free keyword tools and these paid keyword tools.