
Keywords - Short-tail or Long-tail?
We all know that optimization only works if you can prove ROI, right? So how does your SEO company prove ROI to you? Do they send you ranking reports showing you that your website ranks on the first page of Google for hundreds of four- and five-word keyword phrases? Do they talk to you about the long-tail keyword approach? Do they try to convince you that even if only one person searches on that keyword, it’s valuable to you because that person is a buyer and not a looker? If so, then your SEO company is failing you!
What should you receive from your SEO company? The bottom line in most companies is conversions. They should be sending you reports that show how many of your conversions came from natural organic results. This is a sample report from Google Analytics:


Google Analytics Screenshot by Search Engine
Once you know which natural organic search engines are converting traffic for you (in the case above it’s Google), then it’s time to dig a little deeper and find out which keywords are driving that converting traffic:

Google Analytics Screenshot by Keyword
Don’t misunderstand me – the long-tail keyword approach is the correct approach. A user that searches for a “car” is a looker. Once they know what make of car they want, then they’re probably searching for a “Mazda car”. Then they’ll decide on a model such as the “Mazda 6 car”. The next step is to decide on a color so maybe they’ll search for a “red Mazda 6 car”. After that might come “red Mazda 6 car with leather” or perhaps “red Mazda 6 car with roof rack”. In cases like this, these are serious buyers. They could even be searching for “red Mazda 6 car utica ny”. This is the long-tail keyword phrase that you should be concentrating on. However, if you can rank for “Mazda 6 car”, then you darn sure should rank for “red Mazda 6 car utica ny” as long as your website is optimized for those terms.
This is how your SEO company should be proving it’s ROI to you – don’t accept anything less! I welcome all comments and suggestions.






