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In other words, if one key phrase (perhaps for one industry) has 76,000 results, and another (say for another industry) has 42,000 results... is the first one AUTOMATICALLY more competitive?
Or, could the first one have more results, yet overall, fewer optimized results?
In other words, something like viagra with 4,000,000 and something else with only 10,000... (granted, bad example)... but couldn't it be possible for the 10,000 result one to have super, ultra-optimized results, and hence, be more competitive?
Maybe competitive is the wrong term... maybe I should say DIFFICULT...
Thoughts?
dog cat gives:
2.2 Million
while
online casinos gives:
1.3 million
"online casinos"
708,000
"dog cat"
240,000
allinurl: "dog-cat"
1430
allinurl: "online-casinos"
80500
Online casinos is not twice as hard - or even three times as "competitive"
I would say 80 times is more likely is a good start.
There are more things similar you can do for this. However - they are top secret and I can't reveal them under penalty of death.
Duh.
DO you -- or anyone -- have any particularly useful or relevant 'non-penalty-of-death-type' advice about analyzing the competitiveness of multiple industries? ... Or, should I say, is there anything more graceful than what we do now, which is GO AND LOOK at all the SERPS, the results, their PR, and their backlinks?
Thanks anyway!
I also optimise for some terms where the top 10 results are relevant, but don't represent the "big players"; I may just be a little player in this field, but, dangit, I sure as heck can rank higher than Bubba's Widgets, which is hosted on some banner-infested free host... You really don't need hardcore SEO skills to achieve that.
As far as number of results = competitiveness, no, not even close. I rank #1 for terms with 13,000 and 69,800 results; these are not competetive terms at all (the latter is a quite popular type of food, and not a brand name, either); I also rank #1 for a term with only 189 results, and #6 of 1,390, yet these are very competetive terms, albeit VERY niche. :)
As a test... I went and looked at 2 things... one a plain, not-so-hot medication, and the other PHENTERMINE... holy moly... you can really see it and this DOES seem to help over just typing phentermine in GOogle... the results are different and you can see page after page after page of obviously SEO'd stuff (then again, you can both ways!)...
BUt when looking at the other one, it was different and abo****ely DID help as compared to just searching in Google...
THanks!
It may not even help 'that' much... BUT, I can say that when I did my "PHENTERMINE" vs. non-popular test (and this isn't even my industry) using the allintitle thing... the results for Phentermine quickly showed me a bunch of what were obviously highly optimized titles in the SERPS... whereas the non-popular one immediatley showed me plain, non-heavily optmized results that looked natural...
WHo knows, maybe it doesn't actualy help it all... but it's nifty!
what exactly does allintitle do?
Ha Ha :) Yeah not much use for ranking purpose but helps a lot in research IMHO. I use :-
allintitle:Keywords
allintitle:"Keywords"
allintitle:Keywords keywords
allintitle:"Keywords" "Keywords"
Then the results I compare and check where the sites are in normal ranking. I also keep PR in mind. And when you do all this research alongwith link: in google and Alltheweb you have a fair idea of the amount of work that should go into your SEO campaign.
a term like "SEO" or "Search Engine" is hard to get just because you have these experts aiming at such a highly competative term. However something like "Online Casino" has a lot of sites listed under it, but for the most part the owners of those sites no nothing about optimization. They just fork out tons of money into banner ads.
Then the results I compare and check where the sites are in normal ranking. I also keep PR in mind. And when you do all this research alongwith link: in google and Alltheweb you have a fair idea of the amount of work that should go into your SEO campaign.
You gotta bill for something.
Yeah I do send that research work to clients. Don't know if they make any heads or tails out of it but reassures them that the SEO is doing Some work. It is a time consuming job but once I do it I get a very good idea in my Brain. And the SEO strategies flow naturally. ;)
... so that's refreshing to see... and I see it fairly often... which indicates that there's still a lot of 'open territory' out there with regards to heavy-duty optimization.