Hi Cheri;
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Is there an emoticon for tearing my hair out? lol
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Heh.... lol. It's been retired. I used it up trying to explain the storm pay issue in another thread. lol
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Can anyone say workaholic? How about idiot? Why do I do this to myself?!!
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I don't know, but if you figure it out, let me know. It might apply to me, too. lol
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How would you recommend going about this exercise for two groups:
1) Someone who hasn't yet started designing their website or hasn't firmed up the breadth of subject matter/product lines they want to offer.
2) Someone who, like me, already has the middle done (i.e., the website design and major products) and is trying to go back and pick up the pieces I didn't consider in the first place.
In the case of person #2, how many hours would you put into it?
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Hmmm - as to how many hours, that depends on how obsessed you're feeling at the time. (that's just my personal forumula, of course lol)
In both cases, what I tend to do is make a list in notepad. When you're finding keywords and phrases, there's two categories. There are the ones I call the low hanging fruit... and the ones that are the perfect specimens at the top.
The perfect specimens are the ones that have a LOT of demand, but you know competition is going to be tough. Usually they have 10,000 plus searches/month.
The low hanging fruit are the ones down at the bottom that most people ignore. They have maybe 1,000- 2,000 searches. Or less, even.
The low hanging fruit often make great words and phrases to work into articles. The articles link to a primary page.... which is where you focus on the perfect specimens.
Just as an example;
There are
25,337 searches/month for money management
6,057 searches/month for money saving tip
6,766 searches/month for money manager
5,325 searches/month for money lender
So, "money management" would be a good keyword/phrase to work into the main page of a money section. money saving tip, money manager and money lender would be good phrases to use on secondary pages IN a money area.... articles, ebook, etc.
I tend to look at the "whole picture" of more dominant and lesser phrases whether I'm redoing an existing site or starting from scratch. When starting from scratch, it helps me determine words to work around... and if I have a partially done site, it helps me see what content would make good additions and what phrases to work in to supply what people are looking for.
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What does that actually tell me, though? In the market analysis 1.2 section, there's an essay question about comparing my market position to the competition. Trying to answer that question feels like comparing apples to oranges. Going into section 1.3, how do I know that my underlying data aren't flawed because of that?
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Honestly... the best answer is gut reaction.
For example, in the essay part (1.2) most of us instinctively KNOW what we do different than the competition once we look at the competition. Things like we're better quality, or cheaper, or targeted to a different audience, or not as experienced, etc. We target the newbie, or the savvy. We target upper income or lower income. We know who we're reaching out to and what we're offering them. We know those things in our gut.
(That's why "Foundations" started with our target customer... so we start with a basis of WHO we sell to, and then move on to what we sell them)
And - while we know who we are targeting and what we're offering - we often fail to price according to how we KNOW we stack up to the competition or by who we sell to. Many of us shortchange ourselves and price too low. A common mistake is thinking we can be cheaper and better. Another common mistake is providing something that's really hard to come by and then underpricing. Another is getting into a highly saturated market and trying to price high without showing the value of that price.
As for how does it relate... imagine that you have a money and finance site that targets average people trying to get out of debt. Money saving tip would be a great page to add, whether it's an article or an ebook, or whatever.
But what if your finance site targets the six figure income crowd. You might prefer to use phrases more suited to the audience... perhaps "investment tips" instead of "money saving tips" ... that sort of thing.
Was that about as clear as mud?
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OK, that's more than one question. Anybody else having this difficulty, or am I creating the difficulty for myself? Wouldn't be the first time.
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I could probably have added that "high and low hanging fruit" explanation in that part of the keyword research. It might help clarify.... : )
Linda
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