Welcome to our newest installment of our educational Next Level series! In our last episode, Jo Cameron taught you how to whip up intelligent SEO reports for your clients to deliver impressive, actionable insights. Today, our friendly neighborhood Training Program Manager, Brian Childs, is here to show you an easy workflow for targeting multiple keywords with a single page. Read on and level up!
For those who have taken any of the Moz Training Bootcamps, you'll know that we approach keyword research with the goal of identifying concepts rather than individual keywords. A common term for this in SEO is “niche keywords.” I think of a “niche” as a set of related words or concepts that are essentially variants of the same query.
Example:
Let’s pretend my broad subject is: Why are cats jerks?
Some niche topics within this subject are:
- Why does my cat keep knocking things off the counter?
- Why does my cat destroy my furniture?
- Why did I agree to get this cat?
I can then find variants of these niche topics using Keyword Explorer or another tool, looking for the keywords with the best qualities (Difficulty, Search Volume, Opportunity, etc).
By organizing your keyword research in this way, it conceptually aligns with the search logic of Google’s Hummingbird algorithm update.
Once we have niche topics identified for our subject, we then dive into specific keyword variants to find opportunities where we can rank. This process is covered in-depth during the Keyword Research Bootcamp class.
Should I optimize my page for multiple keywords?
The answer for most sites is a resounding yes.
If you develop a strategy of optimizing your pages for only one keyword, this can lead to a couple of issues. For example, if a content writer feels restricted to one keyword for a page they might develop very thin content that doesn’t discuss the broader concept in much useful detail. In turn, the marketing manager may end up spreading valuable information across multiple pages, which reduces the potential authority of each page. Your site architecture may then become larger than necessary, making the search engine less likely to distinguish your unique value and deliver it into a SERP.
As recent studies have shown, a single high-ranking page can show up in dozens — if not hundreds — of SERPs. A good practice is to identify relevant search queries related to a given topic and then use those queries as your H2 headings.
So how do you find niche keyword topics? This is the process I use that relies on a relatively new SERP feature: the “People also ask” boxes.
How to find niche keywords
Step 1: Enter a relevant question into your search engine
Question-format search queries are great because they often generate featured snippets. Featured snippets are the little boxes that show up at the top of search results, usually displaying one- to two-sentence answers or a list. Recently, when featured snippets are displayed, there is commonly another box nearby showing "People also ask” This second box allows you to peer into the logic of the search algorithm. It shows you what the search engine “thinks” are closely related topics.
Step 2: Select the most relevant “People also ask” query
Take a look at those initial “People also ask” suggestions. They are often different variants of your query, representing slightly different search intent. Choose the one that most aligns with the search intent of your target user. What happens? A new set of three “People also ask” suggestions will populate at the bottom of the list that are associated with the first option you chose. This is why I refer to these as choose-your-own-adventure boxes. With each selection, you dive deeper into the topic as defined by the search engine.
Step 3: Find suggestions with low-value featured snippets
Every “People also ask” suggestion is a featured snippet. As you dig deeper into the topic by selecting one “People also ask” after another, keep an eye out for featured snippets that are not particularly helpful. This is the search engine attempting to generate a simple answer to a question and not quite hitting the mark. These present an opportunity. Keep track of the ones you think could be improved. In the following example, we see the Featured Snippet being generated by an article that doesn’t fully answer the question for an average user.
Step 4: Compile a list of "People also ask" questions
Once you've explored deep into the algorithm’s contextually related results using the “People also ask” box, make a list of all the questions you found highly related to your desired topic. I usually just pile these into an Excel sheet as I find them.
Step 5: Analyze your list of words using a keyword research tool
With a nice list of keywords that you know are generating featured snippets, plug the words into Keyword Explorer or your preferred keyword research tool. Now just apply your normal assessment criteria for a keyword (usually a combination of search volume and competitiveness).
Step 6: Apply the keywords to your page title and heading tags
Once you’ve narrowed the list to a set of keywords you’d like to target on the page, have your content team go to work generating relevant, valuable answers to the questions. Place your target keywords as the heading tags (H2, H3) and a concise, valuable description immediately following those headings.
Measure niche keywords in your campaign
While your content writers are generating the content, you can update your Moz Pro campaign and begin baselining your rank position for the keywords you’re using in the heading tags. Add the keywords to your campaign and then label them appropriately. I recommend using a label associated with the niche topic.
For example, let’s pretend I have a business that helps people find lost pets. One common niche topic relates to people trying to find the phone numbers of kennels. Within that topic area, there will be dozens of variants. Let’s pretend that I write a useful article about how to quickly find the phone numbers of nearby animal shelters and kennels.
In this case, I would label all of the keywords I target in that article with something like “kennel phone numbers” in my Moz Pro campaign rankings tool.
Then, once the post is written, I can report on the average search visibility of all the search terms I used, simply by selecting the label “kennel phone numbers.” If the article is successful, I should see the rank positions moving up on average, showing that I’m ranking for multiple keywords.
Want to learn more SEO shortcuts?
If you found this kind of article helpful, consider signing up for the How to Bring SEO In-House seminar. The class covers things like how to set up your team for success, tips for doing research quickly, and how to report on SEO to your customers.
Next Level is our educational series combining actionable SEO tips with tools you can use to achieve them. Check out any of our past editions below:
- Tasty SEO Report Recipes to Save Time & Add Value for Clients
- Hunting Down SERP Features to Understand Intent & Drive Traffic
- I've Optimized My Site, But I'm Still Not Ranking—Help!
- Diving for Pearls: A Guide to Long Tail Keywords
- Be Your Site's Hero: An Audit Manifesto
- How to Defeat Duplicate Content
- Conquer Your Competition with These Three Moz Tools
- 10 Tips to Take the Moz Tools to the Next Level
We just use keyword clustering for these types of things. I've noticed that it's not as popular among SEOs from USA and Europe.
You just upload a list of keywords and clustering tool checks the text on top pages for each keyword, compares similarities, calculates how important a keyword is for a certain page based on TF-IDF and provides you with ready-to-use groups.
Looks something like this: https://i.imgur.com/jggxAii.jpg
Sweet! Nice tip! Thanks for sharing that, Igor.
I love learning about new tools.
Thanks for sharing Igor!
Very good post and with the ever evolving topics that keep coming up this is something that I have been wondering about. In the past I would reserve a set of keywords and create a page per word but with a focus of varieties throughout the page, but I always felt that this would end of forcing the creation of a bunch of not quality content outside of the highest ranking terms.
I really like the concept of searching for people ask query's and from there answer those in your h2, h3, ect headings throughout the page. This post not only shows how to target multiple keywords on a single page but even better create pages that target a lot while answering many different questions a searcher may have.
Yeah. Awesome. Glad it was helpful. You may have seen posts by Glenn Gabe (@glenngabe) on twitter about the May 16/ May 17 ranking disruptions that appear to be targeting low-quality content. I'd follow that guy if you're not already doing so ... just to keep up to date on his commentary. Quality content appears to be something that will continue to get more and more scrutiny, and avoiding thin content is one way to improve that factor. Not sure if you saw it, but we have a "Thin Content" issue alert in the new Site Crawler. I'd check that out. Pretty neat.
That's a great post Brian - thanks.
A question about how to approach legacy content:
For example, a Hyundai car dealer might have used multiple, granular pages targeting keyword variants for what’s essentially one car. Hyundai Elantra, Elantra sedan, Elantra SR Turbo, Elantra 2015, Elantra 2016, etc.
Today, they may find that this approach still delivers the intended results on the SERP. So would the new advice be to consolidate to one Elantra page? And, how to handle the legacy pages? Leave them competing with the new “complete” page, or retire and redirect those pages, or…?
Hey Kennoath,
Thanks for the comment and great question. There have been some recent articles on Moz and elsewhere that discuss "de-indexing" strategies. The challenge with letting older / vintage pages compete with new pages, from my understanding, is that you dilute somewhat the ability for the search engines to identify the content you want to be ranking. De-indexing might be part of the answer. I'd Google it and see if that solution fits your need.
Great stuff here! Thanks for sharing!
Brian this is one of the best articles I've read lately. This strategy definitely inspired that "aha!' moment for me. I've become increasingly involved in creating and managing blog copy for my client's content marketing campaigns, so this article couldn't of come at a better time. I've used a loosely comparable strategy for developing subheading topical relevancy, but your insight on the "People Also Ask" snippet is pure genius and really opened my eyes to other possibilities. Thank you sir, much appreciated. Respect.
Hi Brian, thank you for this post! While I have used "People also ask" to come up with some ideas for my posts I only realise now that when you click on one of the options you get new suggestions related to the topic that the search engine thinks are relevant to your search.
When I prepare my posts I like to list all the variations of keywords to use on my article and have them next to me while composing. This is going to help me A LOT as I´ll get a longer list to use. Thanks again!
Useful tip on the listing of keyword variations! Thanks!
We do this all the time! :)
If you write long form articles, you end up doing this almost by "accident". But doing a deep investigation before hand is really effective.
Thanks Paola!
Not sure if you saw this post as well. A quick way to come up with blog topic ideas:
Generate 100+ Blog Topic Ideas in Seconds
Thank you for the link to the new article. Great info!
My articles are really long and I have this issue. I'll try to investigate before, to achive a better keyword planning.
I highly appreciate your hard work for creating this article that is very useful for me. This blog shows how to target multiple keywords on a single page and your tips are really informative. This is really helpful for keyword planning. I'll keep this article for reference. Thank you so much for sharing
Good post, In my opinion We should use long tail keywords(keyword in variation) to optimize our webpage SEO friendly. This way we can rank the page for several keywords.
Agreed although isnt this effectively 'writing naturally'. When you discuss a topic, you would come at it from different angles which in turn would include different phrases around the central theme.
I have found (especially on more competitive keywords) you need to do more than just sprinkle your key phrase in the Title and Header tags. Using a tool I built - www.webtextanalyzer.com I will analyze the page I am working on for the key phrase against a good ranking competitor. This shows how others are using the key phrase on the page, variants of it and where it is included in images and links. In most cases you will be surprised how often a key phrase is used on a page.
In your example, the primary words are 'cats', 'too' and 'many' and the primary phrase is 'too many cats'. If I pull up from Google(co.uk) the top sites and check them out I immediately see the top words and phrases on the pages using Webtextanalyzer are 'cats', 'too many', 'how many'.
In other words don't talk about dogs when the page is about cats! Like a human, a bot still needs a decent prompt to indicate what the text is about.
Hey Brian How you doing?
I have also tried this way many times to find potential keywords. Thanks for sharing. These are amazing methods to grab keywords. These examples are great. Many people type simpler questions for quick results. There are lots of niche words and I am sure people can easily find up to 10-20 words for their campaign. You can find legitimate keywords in this way.
I applied this strategy put 2 keyword on one link, this is so hard work because its management every week is so bad. When i used one keyword that other keyword is down their rank. Nice strategy share, I will take action target multiple keywords on 1 URL.
Hi Brian, excellent article. When I show these types of things to my clients, they are simply amazed. Some of them just focus on one keyphrase / keyword for a particular page, then wonder how to target everything else. It's always the little things they forget which keep them interested in SEO. Thanks for the information.
Yeah! What I love about this as well is that you can do a little parlor trick with it. Like, sitting in front of a client or prospect, you can pull out your phone and ask them to come up with a question that their target user might ask (I did this yesterday at a MeetUp).
Then you can show them the relationships between "People Also Ask" and the Featured Snippets ... and start drilling into the People Also Ask boxes while explaining the concept of contextual search. It really makes a somewhat complicated concept more tangible.
Glad you liked the post! Thanks for the comment!
Thanks for the amazing post, Brian! It's really helpful and informative. Besides, the idea with the cat is really amusing for me, as I've a cat and it's totally true about destroying the furniture and knocking things off :)
I am not 100% sure who domesticated who in the cat-human relationship. I have two. And that is about 1.5 too many cats for any one household.
Glad you found the post helpful. I love shortcuts and learning from things on the search page. Thanks for sharing!
Awesome Post Sir, I really like how you are analyze Google SERP to identify different keywords & provided actionable to targat all of them on a single page..
Important to work the best before creating content. I personally prefer to use the adwords and ahrefs planner to see which words the competition uses. Take a look. Adwords you have to create a small campaign to see exact results and ahrefs you can use a free trial.
Thanks for the tips, Javier!
Haven't thought about the "people also asked" section in search, really great source of KWs. Thanks for sharing. Cheers, Martin
Using the "people also ask" boxes on Google as H2s in your content is genius! Awesome article overall as well man.
Thanks Nicholas! Glad the article was helpful. Share your neat tips & tricks with me as you find them. Always happy to hear about what works: @thegrowthpilot or #MozAcademy on Twitter.
Awesome post Brian, And the way you suggest to target multiple keywords on one page is really great and the method to find niche keywords is also unique and new for mine.
But I have a question that, how can we target multiple keywords on one page if keywords are more than 5 and also long-tail because title tag limit is 50-60 char.
Finally, I want to say thanks for sharing this kind of knowledge with us.
Ah yes... common challenge. I worked with industrial products that had very high character counts. One way I approached this was trying to identify the operative keyword that was generating results (e.g. if I take out part of this search query, do the remaining words still deliver similar results aligned with my desired search intent?). Or another thing I would try is to hunt for ranking opportunities further up the buyer journey funnel ... toward things that are less product specific and more problem specific.
Thanks for the comment!
Thanks Brian to share your ideas regarding my question.
Hi Brian,
As a beginner in content creation and optimization, I never knew I could target multiple keywords in a page.
This is going to be helpful in my new blog niche.
Thanks for sharing.
I have also tried this way many times to find potential keywords. Thanks for sharing. These are amazing methods to grab keywords. Great examples.
Regards,
Dipesh patel
Thanks Dipesh!
These days the best way to rank for a keyword is including seconday keywords to rank, and mainly gainiing traffic for the post/page.
Great post!
Thanks!
Snippets seem to be really playing a role in a lot of SEO's research!
I've always have liked going to a tool like SEMRush and plug in authority websites and do 'who, what, when, why, how' searches in the Organic Keywords section to pull actual questions people are searching...couple that with Google Website Master Tools search analytics and you can create some pretty powerful optimized pages/sites.
I'll have to start paying attention to Snippets more!
Cool post. It sound like niche words are an easier way of saying LSI. I have used Google suggestions before to find relevant LSI words that provide SEO context for my keywords. This article takes it one step further and goes straight to niche words. Not only does this save a step for me, I don't have to remember what LSI stands for or explain it to anybody.
Removing a 3-letter abbreviation from your day may be the best thing I have ever done for someone. Glad you found the article helpful!
Great post! We are an seo company in Orange County, CA and we are always looking for new seo techniques to implement with our existing strategies or to leverage and create new seo services for our clients.
Do you ever find that targeting too many similar keywords can create a negative impact as it pertains to search confusion for the user? Google webmaster tools does give the guideline that companies can't be everything to everyone and to narrow the keyword focus for a more specific relevant search experience.
This really is next level SEO - very informative piece! The graphics compliment it wonderfully.
Lately I've been only seeing results ranking for long-tail keywords. Even my branded terms are being poached!
This is very good blog thank you! I use a tracking tool called Rankwatch and it comes up with a section where you can find hidden opportunities where your pages are also ranking for different keywords. This can help you realise that you don't need a individual page for each individual keyword. I know that other keyword tracking software have this tool as well like Pro Rank Tracker.
Again thank you for this post!
Cool, Cory. Sounds similar to the Moz Pro feature called "On-Page Content Suggestions" (formerly "Related Topics") that helps you identify contextually similar keywords based on pages ranking elsewhere in the SERP. Pretty neat tool. I particularly like the feature because it is available in Mozbar ... so any page I'm on I can just pop open Mozbar and then see related keywords to the topic. Thanks!
Thats really cool i didn't know that the tool did that, thank you!
Thanks for sharing Brian. Whilst we were using the snippets to add a bit of 'meat around the bone' in terms of keywords and topics, we don't use it as in-depth as you have described here, so it's definitely given us something to think about.
Yeah, the Featured Snippets are really a game changer in my opinion. Not only do they change the competitive landscape I find that they are a way to "peer into" the search algorithm to identify how it views topics. I have top chalk a lot of my intrigue up to Britney Muller, the SEO here at Moz. She wrote an article recently about the People Also Ask boxes and it really got me exploring. If you have some time, check out Britney's posts. She's full of insight.
Thanks for the heads up, will take a look :)
I recall that article, here it is: Infinite "People Also Ask" Boxes: Research and SEO Opportunities
Although I usually research a list of keywords before I write content, the technique you have described to research a subject in depth, especially for long form posts will be very useful. Time to get on with my next blog!
Hey Rachel!
We just set up a new seminar specifically for Content Writers and Editors. If you love tips & tricks about how to maximize your content for SEO, might be worth checking out:
SEO for Content Writers
Thanks for the comment!
Great post Brian! I really like how you've analyzed Google SERP to identify different types of keywords and provided actionable ways to target all of them on just a single page.
I'm all about applied SEO, Sreeram. Keep an eye out for more of these Next Level blog posts. They will be focused on applied SEO tactics. Also consider taking a look at moz.com/training for Moz classes that also focus on applying tools and developing scalable processes.
Thanks, it is a great post. But I have a doubt that if we put keyword in website content and alt tag then these are considered for ranking factor as you have only mentioned about title and h1 optimization.
Thanks Brian, was wondering about how to structure pages and it really sounds logical for a page to have more keywords. If you make small pages focusing on one keyword the reader has to click and click which is not really that user friendly. Good to know it really works this way.