« KEI Observations - Top Keyword research Tips | Main | Revealing Wordtracker walkthrough scheduled for Thursday at 1PM EST »
July 23, 2005
High KEI fishing phrases for fishing related sites
Hello there,
Welcome to the KEI observation deck. One of the questions I'm asked more often than any other question, particularly by our affiliate marketing friends is this:
"Can you tell me a few of the higher KEI phrases that I might optimize my Web site for?"
Now is that a loaded question or what?
Actually in just a matter of minutes I can tell you a number of niche phrases for any specific industry and if you've read my advise in our guide to performing Wordtracker Magic, you'll know exactly how to do it too!
Okay, on with a few observations today and the topic is "fishing."
It seems like it's still as hot a topic as it ever has been with some excellent higher traffic phrases that are only moderately competitive.
Check out a few of these terms next time you go into Wordtracker:
A term like "fly fishing alaska" only has a KEI value of 25.0. But still, for experienced optimizers, you should have no trouble competing with 18,000 competing pages if you use just half of what we teach you at Online Web Training.
If you are looking to raise the odds of higher traffic with much lower competition, try creating some quality Web content around the topic of "rainbow trout fishing canada" with a KEI of 49.0 and only 1500 competing pages.
If it still feels like it's too challenging.....then check out a few of these topics:
"canada northern pike fishing" KEI 184.50
(Only 738 competing pages)
"Lake huron salmon fishing" KEI 563.0
(Only 577 competing pages)
"Michigan Walleye fishing" KEI 762.0
(Only 517 competing pages)
or like taking candy from a baby (who would do such a thing)
"lake huron walleye fishing" KEI 1230.6
(Only 280 competitors for this exact phrase)
Other interesting phrases include:
"walleye checklists" KEI 961
(zero competition)
"how to make catfish baits" KEI 441.0
Just a few observations on this July evening. Come on back soon and we'll be observing some more top Wordtracker sightings.
Wishing you the very best of success!
John Alexander
john@searchengineworkshops.com
http://www.searchengineworkshops.com
Posted by John at July 23, 2005 05:55 PM