One week costs around $25 or 1 month around $50. The sign up process is painless, efficient, allowing access to the service within minutes.Using Wordtracker the first time as a keyword generator, go to the Keyword Universe section. At step 1, type in your keyword phrases to let Wordtracker query it's database & thesaurus on possible related words. With the example of the randomly chosen keyword phrase "childs toÿ" in the Keyword Universe at Step 1 on Wordtracker produced a list of 300 other possible related subjects plus 272 from its built in thesaurus. Most of these keyword's may not be relevant, but they could spark an idea and that's what you're looking for. At step 2 you can use Wordtracker as a keyword analyzer by selecting keyword phrases found at step 1 to query the main database. It looks at all the variations of phrases people used in the past two months based on your keyword's. You may also select various options on how the database is searched, from a simple query, to a comprehensive to an exact match. Exact meaning - it will only provide results based on exactly what's typed in. It does not look for variations in the word order or variations of the words themselves. It will not find Childs toÿ, Childs Toÿ, CHILDS TOY, child toÿ, Child Toÿ, Childrens Toÿ, Childrens Toys or any other combination you may think of except "child toÿ".
At an early stage, get as many ideas as possible for keyword's. So in this example a comprehensive generator query was chosen. Using the keyword generator for "child wooden toÿ" produced 300 related subjects plus 300 from the Thesaurus, but selecting 'comprehensive' on "child wooden toÿ" gave no results in the database. The resulting 'Count' will tell you how many times each of the keyword phrases appeared in the database over the past 8 weeks. That's how many times someone used the keyword phrase in crawlers from which Wordtracker gets its data. For more details see "Keyword analyzer, generator, Wordtracker - What it can and can't do" For example "childs toÿ" was used only twice and "child toys" five times in the preceding 8 weeks. The keyword phrase "wooden toys" had 657 searches, 'Wooden Toys' only 18 and 'WOODEN TOYS' along with "Wooden toys" receiving 13 searches. Notice here the number of different ways users type in the phrase "wooden toys" all produce different levels of traffic. It's one reason why when finally choosing a keyword phrase, you need to include all possible variations of it, including misspellings. You may find there's a lot of traffic on some keyword's people regularly misspell. You should also consider the different spellings between US English and other forms of English. Another result 'Predict' gives an estimate of all the searches on the keyword or phrase across all search engine's for a 24 hour period. But, appreciate it's a prediction based on some assumptions by Wordtracker about the number of searches completed for all words across all engine's everyday.
Finally selecting a comprehensive generator query on "child toÿ" gave 99 keyword phrases with 5 considered irrelevant. That left 94 with relevant variations of phrases containing those words. It represents 42.3% of the total number of different keyword phrase variations found by the combined results from Wordtracker, Google, Adword Analyzer and Niche Finder. In this example the Wordtracker keyword generator found less than half the phrases available. Should it be seen as just a one off example ? Perhaps on other keyword phrases we would see different results. Yes, a different percentage, but No I don't consider it to be an isolated result. During some recent real keyword phrase research on 645 different keyword phrases, 194 of them, ( 30% ) or just under a third, were not found on Wordtracker but by other generator tools. The continuing part of this article on Wordtracker, keyword analyzer, generator can be found at:Keyword analyzer, generator, Wordtracker - Is one enough ? - Pt2 |