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Wait, why did we do all this hard work again?

Posted: Wed Feb 12, 2025 5:40 am
by kexej28769@nongnue
We want to consider not only search volume, but ideally also intent, competition, etc.



You have successfully taken a list of thousands of keywords and grouped them into related keyword groups.



Now you can finally achieve that “product/market fit” we talked about. It’s magical.

You can take each keyword group and create venezuela number data a piece of better content around it, ہدف بناناdozens of keywords, quickly increasing your ability to get more organic traffic. Boo yah!

Everything is done, now what?
Now the real fun begins. You can start planning new content that you never knew you needed to create. Alternatively, you can map your keyword groups (and subgroups) to existing pages on your website and add keywords and optimizations to header tags, body text, etc. and so on for all those long-tail keywords that you may have overlooked.

Keyword grouping is underrated, overlooked, and largely ignored. It creates a huge new opportunity to optimize for terms where none existed. Sometimes it’s just adding a phrase or a few phrases here and there that target a long-tail keyword that will bring increased search traffic to your site. Do this dozens of times and you’ll see a steady increase in your organic traffic.

What do you think?

Leave a comment below and let me know your thoughts on keyword clustering.

Need a hand? Just give me a shout, I'm happy to help.
Google’s growing dominance of its search engine results pages (SERPs) has caused a lot of panic and controversy in the SEO industry. As Barry Adams recently pointed out on Twitter, this move by Google is not exactly new, but it feels like Google has suddenly put its foot on the accelerator:


I find it hilarious that SEOs are suddenly angry that Google is aggressively targeting certain verticals with in-SERP features. They've been doing this for years.