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Webmaster Articles
Social Media Keyword Tools
By barry hurd

It is all about the keywords right? Well not really. It is
actually all about the demographics each keyword
represents. When someone searches Google for "seattle
real estate" you have to put yourself in the mindset of the
searcher. Who searches for that phrase? It could be a
prospect for a home, a real estate agent checking local
properties, or a real estate broker looking for a new
recruit. Assuming a keyword will generate a return on
investment for the time and budget it takes to have an
organic result in the search engine may be a monolithic
mistake.
FreeSEOResources.com
Rather than think entirely "in the box" of search terms and keywords, think demographics. Think target
market.Consider social media a chance to explore your target market. One keyword leads to another, leads to
another. Within a few steps you may discover that your best prospect for your business may be two or three
levels removed from where you have been trying to reach them.

Example: Real estate professionals always want to show up for "city state real estate" as a term. Yet often
they need to reach a person much earlier in the process. A real estate transaction is a relationship based
sales process taking one to twelve months. There are indicators online regarding what people do before buying
a home. They get married. They find a new job. They get divorced. They have kids. They go to school.
Social Media generates an entirely new set of keywords to compare and look at in the "big picture"

demographics
hobbies and interests
family connections
friend networks

Taking the real estate example: You can look at schools, churches, major employers, lawyers, hospitals and
create a niche for themselves in a strong and consistently producing category. For instance Boeing, Idearc,
AT&T, Comcast, Amazon, Microsoft, etc are all heavily present in the Seattle area. More importantly, some of
those companies have huge employee groups clustered around certain neighborhoods.

How do I find my niche? Think out of the Box

There are a variety of tools out there that will help you with keyword research and drawing some basic
conclusions. There are different categories of tools that can be used together or individually, they will help you
discover:

the popularity of your keyword
who is talking about your niche (and the people involved in the conversation)
keyword synonyms and related terms (One letter may make all the difference)
niche industry trends and traffic patterns

Keyword Research Tools

-Google AdWords Keyword Suggestions- Use the Keyword Tool to get new keyword ideas. It works with
providing keywords based on words or phrases and can also recommend based on site content.
-Google Traffic Estimator- a very simple to use traffic tool. You can dump in a list of hundreds of keywords or
phrases and see what choices make sense for your next article.
-WordTracker - Wordtracker is the best non-google system, however it requires you to purchase a
membership to get real usage out of the tool (and I am a fan of free/low cost)

Competitive Keyword Tools

-Compete.com Search Analytics - Identifies rival search marketing strategies to take your SEM and SEO
efforts to the next level. Also defines traffic patterns on competitor sites.
-KeywordSpy - shows terms that competitors are buying or ranking for in the organic search results, including
pay per click ad text.
-KeyCompete - shows pay per click words that competitors are buying.

Social Media Specific

-TweetVolume , TweetScan, Summize all give insight to Twitter. They can show you how much a keyword is
being talked about and the associated terms that are drawn to it.
-del.icio.us tag page- StumbleUpon tags - - The most popular tags (keywords) can be seen in clusters of
information.
-BlogCatalog Directory - MyBlogLog Directory - are both massive directories of sites that have been tagged by
a member community. You can quickly search for a term, see associated terms on a site, and popular
members on each site that may be influencers.
-IceRocket Trends - Technorati Tags - Useful for seeing keyword trends (Icerocket) and authority value
(Technorati- the number of sites linking to another site)

About the author

Barry Hurd is President, author, speaker, and voice of 123 Social Media - Business Social Media and
Promotion
. He has a history of over fifteen years working on numerous innovative efforts with online business
models: past projects have included NIKE, REI, TMP Worldwide, Monster.com, Verizon Superpages, Intuit,
and RIS Media. from http://www.FreeArticlesAndContent.com