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Old June 18th, 2006, 11:23 AM
nazneenapa nazneenapa is offline
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Keyword research

hi ,

Let's say If someone was launching a site industry specific . How would one go about determining, on the keyword research side, how big or small the tail of the search terms in that industry are?

looking to measure the value of being listed in the top for a few, hig volume search terms in the head vs. the value of having rankings for the thousands of smaller terms making up the tail. Other than simply using intuition and logic, one can't seem to think of a good way to do it.

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Old June 19th, 2006, 06:29 AM
silvermoon silvermoon is offline
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Hi,
To approach an "industry," I'd want to get a look at what works for that industry's longer standing niche publications. What concerns re-surface regularly? Are they adequately addressed? Would these concerns be of more interest to customers or colleagues?

Would it be helpful to look at how a customer hears about and chooses who to hire or buy from?
silvermoon
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Old June 19th, 2006, 10:12 AM
visio visio is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nazneenapa
hi ,

Let's say If someone was launching a site industry specific . How would one go about determining, on the keyword research side, how big or small the tail of the search terms in that industry are?

looking to measure the value of being listed in the top for a few, hig volume search terms in the head vs. the value of having rankings for the thousands of smaller terms making up the tail. Other than simply using intuition and logic, one can't seem to think of a good way to do it.


You can do both. If your site targets real estate in NY don't target "real estate" you will never get it.
Target "real estate in new york", "real estate in ny" etc

So your title should be something like
Real Estate in New York by Rise Rolling Realtors

I have found targetted is always better than general. You can get mroe conversions from "ebay image hosting" than "image hosting" because it is specific.

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