Re-post from the  blog



When it comes to Search Engine Optimization (SEO), it’s tempting to focus on a single keyword and attempt to rank very well for it. While this seems like a sound strategy, it causes you to miss out on bigger opportunities to improve your rankings. ‘Keyword grouping’ helps you take advantage of those opportunities.

In this article, we’ll explain what keyword grouping is and how using it improves your content’s organization, relevancy, and ability to rank well in Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs). Then we’ll share how to implement keyword grouping for your site.

Let’s go!

What Is Keyword Grouping and How Can It Help Your Business?

Keyword grouping is the process of creating groups or clusters of related keywords. You can then use these groups to create content optimized for multiple search terms, by using several related terms from a keyword group in your posts or pages.

This is beneficial to your site in a few ways. Firstly, it takes advantage of the fact that several search terms could have the same ‘search intent’. For example, consider the searches “Thai food near me” and “local Thai food”, which have the same intent.

If your pages are optimized for one and not the other, you’ll miss out on traffic searching for the alternative term, even though your content answers their search. Optimizing for both helps you reach a wider audience.

Keyword grouping also prevents ‘keyword cannibalization‘, a process where you accidentally pit your content against itself by using the same keyword for multiple posts. If all your content is trying to rank for one search term, it may be more difficult for any post to rise to the top.

Let’s look at an example. Say you run a food blog, and want to create content about Thai food. Instead of optimizing a post only for the keyword “Thai food dishes,” you could use a group of keywords including “best Thai food dishes”, “healthy Thai food dishes”, and “spicy Thai food dishes”.

This way you prevent keyword cannibalization, and have the chance to rank for all four keywords instead of just one. This benefits searchers – who are more likely to find your informative post – and you, as you’ll increase your post’s visibility and draw in more users.

How to Implement Keyword Grouping for Your Content (3 Steps)

Keyword grouping has been around for some time, but it used to be quite labor intensive to carry out. Now there are automated tools to help you create keyword clusters, so you don’t have to rely on spreadsheets and your own brain power.

Step 1: Compile a List of Related Search Terms

To start, you’ll first have to create a list of related keywords you can use to create content. Pick a single search term you want to rank for, or one you already rank for. You can return a list of related keywords in a research tool such as Google Keyword Planner, Serpstat, or SEMRush.

Your list will likely be very long. Our example keyword, “Thai food”, returned 1,682 related keywords in SEMRush. Don’t worry, you don’t have to use every keyword that comes up in your list on your site.

2. Create ‘Clusters’ Using a Keyword Grouping Tool

Once you have your list of related keywords, it’s time to put them in groups, also known as clusters. There are two methods for creating clusters: soft and hard. Which one you choose determines how closely related the terms in your clusters are.

Keyword grouping tools cluster terms by looking for how many top search results they have in common. In soft clusters, any two terms can share search results, but not every term has to share results with each other. In a hard cluster, all the search terms must share common search results.

Depending on the tool you’re using, you may specify which method you would like to use. Then, you can run the list generated in the first step through a keyword grouping tool such as Serpstat or SEMRush.

Here, SEMRush returned more than 80 groups for the keyword “Thai food”, each of which break down into more specific subgroups. The subgroup “thai food dish” contains 16 keywords you could use to craft a post on Thai food dishes for the food blog in our example.

It’s important to note that these tools aren’t perfect. Of the dozens of groups SEMRush returned for “Thai food”, several referenced specific cities and even street names that may not be relevant to the blog in our example.

You wouldn’t want to optimize for irrelevant keywords, so make sure to weed these out of your clusters. However, as long as you apply a little discretion to these lists, they’re still useful and much more convenient than creating groups by hand.

3. Build Content Around Your Keyword Groups

Now you have your keyword groups, it’s time to start creating content. As you write your post or page, you can utilize several or all of the keywords in your keyword group for that content. This can be done in a variety of ways.

Going back to our Thai food example, imagine you created a post titled “Best Thai Food Dishes” and were using the keyword group for “thai food dishes” SEMRush generated in the previous step.

 

You might include keywords from the cluster such as “best thai food dishes to order” and “top thai food dishes” as variations on the title. Including these in the body text will diversify your language and help your post rank for these search terms.

Likewise, you might use “spicy thai food dishes”, “traditional thai food dishes”, and “healthy thai food dishes” in subheadings and sections throughout the post. This will help organize the content in the post and give you a chance to rank for more terms.

It’s important to note that using keyword groupings to create a strong content strategy can’t replace high quality content. It’s still important to produce posts that are accurate, optimized, and relevant to your users. As always, simply jamming posts full of keywords won’t help your content rank.


Source: John Hughes for Elegant Themes Blog