![]() ![]() ![]() They have a 1-10 ranking of competition that I've found to be very helpful. You pop in a few keywords, and the tool pulls in a number of keywords from Adwords and elsewhere, and a whole plethora of data on them. What I love about this tool is how deep it goes into with the traffic and competition estimates. Take a look at the image below:įirst, SeCockpit. While this does not always give consistent good results, you can still find variations that you can use for finding keywords. Last but not the last, I'd then go check Google SERPs to check their related search results. The tool also provides data for Search Volume, Keyword Difficulty, CPC, Competitiveness, Estimated results in SERPs and even trend results. This gives a significant amount of data of keyword phrases with moneytary value for every keyword SEMrush has in their database. SEMRush is always my second to go keyword research tool. While not all are qualified for keyword targeting as some have very low targeting search volume with no moneytary value, you can still get a huge list of historical data from Google itself of every search query. First things first, I'd always first visit Google Keyword Planner, this gives me a significant amount of related keywords for a single term from previous months with organic search data and with cost per click value.
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