Do you want to attract just anyone to your site, or do you want qualified traffic; people ready to buy what you’re selling? When you booked your last vacation, you probably typed in a specific phrase like, “extreme ski resorts” for a certain location. It’s unlikely you searched “travel” right before making that purchase. Long tail optimization capitalizes on specific phrases with low competition and potentially high conversion rates.
The Long Tail
For those new to long tail, let’s back track. The graph above illustrates high and low frequency online searches. The spike to the left represents highly searched words like “mp3” and “travel.” It’s a small area on the graph, but think of it as a chaotic mosh pit of sites that are pushing to rank for keywords that probably won’t convert. Seriously, when was the last time you searched “buy car” and then bought a car? So, what else is going on here? To the right you can see a dip in search frequency which levels off. This level, or long tail, consists of the less obvious, more specific phrases (i.e. “new 2010 Dodge Durango SLT” in a specific city/state instead of “buy car”). This long tail area consists of less competition and a greater opportunity to generate income.
What is a Long Tail Phrase?
Long tail phrases:
- Multi-word phrases of common terms
- Searched less, but more specific
- Have less competition
- Are easier to rank for
- Target qualified traffic
- Can increase your conversion rate
Start With Keyword Research
As with other online marketing campaigns, you want to start long tail optimization by performing keyword research. Start by searching your primary product or service in Google, and then examine the keywords used by the top 10 sites, and other competitors.
Read Effective Keyword Research to learn the tools and methods for finding the best keywords. (Go ahead, read it. I’ll wait).
Google has a search-based keyword tool that will give you keyword ideas based on your (or your competitor’s) existing pages. The Google keyword tool analyzes the website entered and matches it with searches already being performed by users in Google, giving you a list of potential keyword phrases. The results also indicate the number of monthly searches, amount of competition, and suggested bid. This is a decent tool for exploring your competitor’s keywords. You can quickly sort the results by number of daily searches and competition by clicking the header tags.
Once you have a decent list, scan it over and make sure it includes variations specific to your product/service including sizes, colors, descriptors (review, discount), conditions (new, used), brand, model numbers, city/town, state/zip, etc.
Long Tail Phrases That Convert
Remember, long phrase doesn’t automatically mean long tail phrase and less competition doesn’t automatically mean better converting. To learn which phrases will result in sales, you need to test using PPC. If you can’t make a sale with a keyword phrase in PPC, you won’t be able to make money organically with that phrase. Once you know which phrases convert, you’ll know where to focus optimization efforts.
Long Tail Optimization and Site Architecture
Keep long tail optimization in mind when building new sites, creating categories, and naming pages. Give each page a unique Title, description meta tag, header tags, content, and anchor text that includes the converting phrase. Thinking long tail can also give you direction and inspiration when creating a content schedule.
Research, Test, Target
Many site owners lock in on highly competitive terms and never look back. There is nothing wrong with being ambitious, but making money is nice too! A better approach is to research, target, and test long tail phrases. In fact, some terms might have such little competition that quick page optimization might be enough to get you the conversions you’re after. Just remember, long phrase doesn’t necessarily mean long tail and not all long tails convert–you must test to see what works.
Read more articles:
• Title Tag Recommendations & Tips
• Effective Keyword Research
Matei Rares says
Before optimizing the website with the keywords I suggest to check if you can rank for that keywords. My firs advice is to check the keyword/keywords on Goolge Adwords Keyword Tool External and choose the ones that have Monhly search volume between 1.000 and 5.000. Choose 1-5 of these keywords and try to optimize your blog/website for them.
I’m using only free tools for keyword research for my websites, blogs. These are: Adwords Keyword Tool External, WordTraker Free Tool, SpyFu (free), SEO3Firefox free plugin. To improve my work and for faster results.
Vlad says
The questions is how much you should run your PPC campaign to know what log tail converts? And how much money is involved. What will happent with a guy who don’t have money to invest? Should he quit?
[Blocked by CFC] Jerry West says
The bottom line is with anything … starting a business, buying a home or buying a stock. If you don’t have the money to invest and can afford to lose your entire principle, don’t invest. If you don’t have enough to test the market via PPC, you don’t have any business being in the market. In order to be successful, you have to do it right the first time.
posizionamento siti internet says
I deal with plastic surgery sector, and I think that short tail are the best way to convert, because many people look for the best surgeon and they are ready to cross the entire country to go under procedure with a trust surgeon. So if I use “plastic surgery” without a location, I find more people interested and able to convert. But this is my sector, one of the few for wich people is disposable to cross even the ocean.
For other sectors I’m agree with the author, long tail keywords are the useful and more easy to convert.