Grouping Keywords by Relevance
The SEO Keyword Research Master Guide - Chapter 4
Grouping related keywords
Last Updated: May 25, 2021
Keyword Research isn't only about finding the right keywords, it's also about finding the right related keywords to group together.
Related keywords are important because they help build your content and add topical relevance, helping you to rank.
They can also help you to rank for a broader set of terms. Often, you'll find a popular, well-optimized page ranking for hundreds or thousands of related keyword phrases.
When creating website content, you're typically faced with two keyword challenges:
- When to create separate pages for each keyword vs. grouping them together
- Which related keywords should you include with each topic?
We'll address these each in turn.
When to create separate pages for each keyword
Let's consider our keyword suggestions for "motorcycle jackets".
Is it worth it for us to create a separate page for each of these keywords? Probably not, but how do we decide?
Here are a few criteria to consider when creating a unique page for a keyword.
1. Sufficient volume
Does the keyword get enough search traffic to warrant its own page?
In the example above, "motorcycle jackets amazon" records only one search per month. For many people, this isn't worth the effort.
(Also, you don't want to have to compete against Amazon for one lousy visit per month.)
2. Is it a separate topic?
Some keywords are so similar to each other, they obviously talk about the same thing. In the old days of SEO, you could get away with splitting each and every keyword variation onto its own page, and Google could rank you.
Since Google released its Hummingbird algorithm (and later, Rankbrain), it's gotten much better at grouping keyword intent and figuring out when separate keyword phrases have the same intent.
For example, in the above keyword set we see the following phrases:
- motorcycle jackets leather: 47
- leather motorcycle jackets: 677
These seem obviously like the same topic, but often it's easy to misjudge intent. To be sure, you can simply Google the two keywords and see how much overlap there is between ranking results.
If both keywords return the same general set of URLs, this is an indication that Google considers these two keywords synonymous enough that you can group them together.
In this example, both keywords returned the exact same URLs, so we know we don't need to split them out onto their own pages.
3. Does it make sense?
Presumably, you know your subject matter better than most.
When creating content, you may simply ask yourself if a page deserves its own topic, or if it should be combined with others.
You don't have to follow the crowd. Google results are a great indication of what people are searching for, but it's fine to forge your own path if you have something new or important to offer.
How to group keywords together
When planning content, you obviously start with your main keyword, but it helps to have a list of 5-20 other related keywords to help build out your content.
These related keywords help inform what the content is about, can become your subject headings, and generally provide additional structure and meaning to your content.
Out of a list of potentially hundreds of keywords, how do you choose the most important, most relevant phrases?
1. Relevance
First and foremost, your chosen related keywords must be relevant to your main focus keyword.
Relevance is often easiest to figure out because we've already done all the work in the steps above.
To make it easy, Keyword Explorer actually contains a relevance metric when you research keyword suggestions. When we've narrowed down our main topics, we can simply sort each suggestion by relevance.
The score is a little easier to work with if you export the data into a spreadsheet, as in this example.
By this point, you should have a pretty good understanding of which keywords are most related to each other.
2. Volume
We keep coming back to volume because it's such a valuable metric.
When deciding which related keywords to use, you can use volume metrics to filter out lower-value keyword opportunities.
In the example above, "motorcycle jackets with armor" has the following search volume metrics:
- Minimum volume: 501
- Maximum volume: 805
- Exact volume: 730
Minimum and maximum volume represent the estimated range of monthly keyword search volume with the highest probability, whereas exact volume represents a best guess estimation of the exact search volume.
If it fits the brand or offering, we'd definitely want to consider "cheap" in this context.
On the other hand, "mesh motorcycle jacket with armor" only has a search volume of 1-10. If "mesh" wasn't central to our offerings, we'd probably consider leaving this keyword out of consideration.
3. Modifiers, n-grams, and repeating phrases
When you see the same keywords repeating over and over again in your keyword set, that's a good sign you should include those phrases in your related keyword set.
This is true even if the individual keywords don't have very much volume by themselves.
If we look at our "motorcycle jackets with armor" example, we can see the same keyword modifiers appearing again and again. These include:
- cheap
- mens
- leather
These appear so often with our main keywords, it seems like a good idea to include these modifiers when crafting our on-page keyword strategy.
Often, it's helpful to use a tool such as a word frequency counter to actually count all your keyword variations. We've loaded the first 50 most relevant keywords from our spreadsheet into such a tool and came up with the following word frequencies:
Keyword | Frequency |
---|---|
motorcycle | 47 |
armor/armored | 33 |
jacket/jackets | 32 |
with | 11 |
body | 6 |
best | 6 |
leather | 5 |
for | 4 |
In this case, "body", "best", and "leather" were a few of the most frequent keywords to appear, so we might consider looking at phrases that include these terms.
Another helpful technique is to find the n-grams in your keyword set. N-grams are simply sequences of words of a certain number.
You can use an n-gram viewer, such as this one by SEO Ryan Jones, to help visualize the most important n-grams in your keyword set.
Here we can see common patterns start to emerge, including:
- cheap
- body armor
- gear
- protective
It's important to remember when building your related keyword phrase list, that you may not use these terms exactly as they appear here.
Instead, you're looking for broad patterns and modifiers that you can use to build a list of a few relevant, related pages to support your primary keyword.
Pro tip: finding related keywords with the MozBar
If you have a Moz Pro account (including free trial) you can easily find the most relevant keywords for any page on the web using the MozBar.
Simply navigate to the page you want to research. In this case, we'll use the MozBar to find related keywords for our page about Domain Authority.
After navigating to the page, go to the keyword tab (KW) and type in your primary keyword that you want to rank for. The MozBar will then analyze the page and give you a list of the most relevant related keywords.
Adding these keywords and topics to the page is one of the easiest ways to earn higher rankings.
For a deeper dive into how related keywords help your SEO, Moz founder Rand Fishkin created a helpful Whiteboard Friday.