Jul 30

Google Alerts ping you every time new occurrences of the keywords you track are found by Google’s search robots. This is great for reputation management (tapping into what’s being said about you, your brand or your competitors online) but it’s also a handy tool for keyword research.

For example, I’m subscribed to Google Alerts for the Vancouver 2010 mascots Quatchi, Sumi, Miga and Muk Muk. We’re buying these terms in Google Adwords and using the broad match type so it’s important to do exhaustive negative keyword research. Even though these are fairly specific terms, and we’d like to think all searches including these keywords are looking for merchandise — truth is there are a lot of other reasons someone might include “sumi” or “miga” in a search engine.

Over time I’ve discovered negative matches that my keyword research tools missed:

  • Andrew Miga (journalist)
  • Motherson Sumi Systems Ltd
  • White Snow Sumi Brushes
  • Sumi Ink Painting
  • MUK: Muk (EP)
  • MIGA-World Bank
  • Western Sumi Student’s Union
  • Sumi Salad

Negative matches: -andrew -motherson -systems -white -snow -brush -ink -painting -world bank -western -students -union -salad

The tough one is Muk, the self-titled album by the artist MUK. Negative matching “muk” to “muk” won’t work unless I phrase match the keyword “Muk muk” or -ep -album.

It only takes a couple minutes a week to stay on top of this small list. Certainly you wouldn’t want to be alerted every time someone mentions “iPhone” or “skinny jeans” – but for unique terms this works well.

Source: GetElastic

5 Responses to “Using Google Alerts for Keyword Research”

  1. Thao Says:

    Thanks for your information

  2. T-Bone Says:

    General keywords are really hard to rank for lately, I’ve found using longtail keywords are easier to rank for.

  3. Kernel Kyle Says:

    Keyword research used to confuse me. Thanks for making some things clearer. Now if I can only find a few good ones for a couple of my sites.

  4. Evo Says:

    Interesting idea. I hadn’t thought about using Google Alerts in this way, in general I only go for exact matches on Adwords though.

  5. Aurelio Schreffler Says:

    I do not recommend software programs very often but this new service is superb. It is a key phrase tool with a database of millions of keywords showing the adwords traffic count per month together with the google competition count and other numbers.

    At a click of a button you will discover keyword phrases with traffic but no competition and I have used it already to get pages and web sites to the top of the various search engines, even without backlinks.

    You can see a video of it in use here – http://MarketEyeSite.com

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