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The Best Free Keyword Tools

the best free keyword tools for finding low-competition keywords for SEO

Keyword Research: How to use free tools to find the best keywords

Do you want to rank higher in the search engines?

Of course you do! Good search engine rankings are an essential part of any content marketing strategy.

Part of the secret is choosing the right keywords — the terms your audience are searching for — and creating content around those keywords.

But there’s a challenge:

If you choose very popular keywords that everybody is chasing, you don’t stand a chance of ranking. There’s just too much competition in the search engines.

It’s easy to rank in the search engines for terms that nobody is searching for. But there’s no point, obviously!

So how do you find keywords that enough people are searching for to make them worthwhile, but not so competitive that they are impossible to rank for?

And how do you find keywords that everybody else hasn’t found already — which is the best keyword search tool to use?

Which is the best keyword tool?

That’s what we’re going to cover in this article, but first a few basics (skip this bit if you’re already familiar with long-tail keywords and go straight to the best keyword research tools).

Keyword research basics

What is a long tail keyword?

A long-tail keyword is simply a longer, more specific keyword.

Long-tail keywords have several benefits over short-tail keywords:

So as well as being easier to rank for, long-tail keywords are potentially more valuable to you.

And over 70% of Google searches are for long-tail keywords, so added together they have more search volume than short-tail.

But how do you find these long-tail keywords – which is the best keyword search tool to use?

Google Ads Keyword Planner

The traditional way to get started with keyword research was to use the Google Ads Keyword Tool. You enter a few ‘seed’ keywords, and the AdWords Keyword Planner will come up with some more suggestions for you, together with estimates of traffic volume, and an indication of how competitive (or difficult to rank for) each keyword is.

This tool only shows search volume (the number of people searching for each keyword) if you are using Google Ads.

You can use the tool for free to find keywords, but you will only see the all-important search volume if you are a Google advertiser (read on for a solution to this).

Google Autosuggest (Search Autocomplete)

You’ve probably noticed that when you start to enter a search term into Google, it will offer some suggestions for what you might be looking for:

These are all possible long-tail keyword ideas for you. There are tools such as Ubersuggest that will help you find all the Google suggestions from autocomplete.

However, these are only keywords that begin with the phrase you enter. It would not come up with “easy noodle recipes” for example, which might be a perfect keyword for you.

Google also has other suggestions, that don’t necessarily begin with the phrase you entered, but are related to it. To see these, you need to go to the bottom of the search results page, where you will see them under the heading Related Searches.

To make it easy, there are tools such as keyword.io that will scrape all the suggestions from Google related searches for you.

All of these suggestions are possible keywords for you.

But all this procedure is pretty standard practice, and has been for a long time.

You’re still going to get pretty much the same keyword ideas as everybody else.

We need some new, off-the-beaten track ways of finding keyword ideas, that are not the same as everybody else has already found using the methods above.

3 Free Keyword Research Tools

KW Finder

KW Finder not only finds keyword suggestions, it also gives very useful information on how competitive a given keyword is (both for SEO and for PPC advertising), and search volume data as well.

It also shows the top search engine results for each keyword, and an analysis of their domain strength, number of backlinks, Facebook Likes etc, to give you an idea of how likely you are to be able to compete with them.

If KW Finder doesn’t come up itself with the keywords you want to analyse, you can enter any keyword you’ve found into it, to get a competitive analysis and see how easy or difficult it would be to rank for.

KW Finder is free to use, but you can only do so many searches a day with the free version. If you need more, you will need to subscribe which starts at $29 per month. Try it out for free here.

Answer the Public

Answer The Public is a really cool keyword tool, as you’ll see as soon as you see the home page animation!

Answer the Public takes your keyword, and prefaces it with prepositions such as ‘for’, ‘like’, ‘near’, ‘with’, ‘without’ etc. to come up with some more keyword ideas which it presents in a neat ‘wheel’, although you can also download the suggestions as a list.

So Answer The Public will find a whole heap of long-tail keywords for you, based on prepositions that people will commonly use in their search queries.

But what’s really cool, is it also comes up with suggestions based on questions such as ‘what’, ‘which’, ‘where’, ‘how’, ‘are’ etc.

Another whole raft of long-tail keywords for you, that match what people are likely to search for in the search engines.

Since the Hummingbird update, Google has placed increasing emphasis on content that answers people’s questions.

If you can include answers to popular questions in your content, you stand a better chance of ranking.

And even better, if you provide a concise, authoritative answer you may even achieve a coveted Featured Snippet listing (position zero in the search results, above number one!)

TIP: A really good strategy for increasing your search engine rankings (and maybe even getting a featured snippet), is to pick a number of popular questions, and answer them in your content. You can do this in the form of a ‘Question & Answer’ section or maybe ‘FAQs’. Just pick half a dozen or so questions, and list them, together with a short answer.

FAQ Fox

Answer the Public gets it’s questions from the search engines.

FAQ Fox gets it’s questions from other sites, such as Quora and Reddit, where people go specifically to ask questions.

Bingo — a whole new set of questions to answer to help your Hummingbird rankings, and more potential long-tail keywords!

Long Tail Pro

Although the focus of this article is on free tools, there is one tool that’s not free, but it’s so useful it would be remiss of me not to mention it.

Long Tail Pro is possibly the single most useful tool I’ve found for keyword research, and it’s now a firm favourite of mine. And although it is a paid product, it’s not expensive at $37 per month, and there is a $1 trial.

At that price you’d be silly not to try it and see what you think. You can probably get a couple of projects done for the one dollar, and then end it there if you like – you get 10 days.

Although you’ll probably end up keeping it. I did.

That’s what’s really good about Long Tail Pro — it integrates keyword research and SEO metrics all in one place, which will save you a lot of time.

You enter your seed keywords, and any additional keywords (such as the long-tail ones you may have discovered using the tools above), and Long Tail Pro will go off and find the number of people searching for each keyword, analyse the Google SERPs for each one, and give you an idea of how difficult it will be to rank for.

As well as that, it will also check the availability of the domain name for each one.

It saves hours, and is quite literally a gold mine. I recommend you take the $1 Trial and see for yourself. (aff link)

And as one of my readers, if you do decide to buy it you’ll get 30% off using the links above.

Ahrefs Keywords Explorer

Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer will come in handy when you need more data than free tools can provide. Ahrefs gives access to a huge database to draw ideas from – 6.1 billion keywords for 170 countries.

Keywords are supplied with accurate, clickstream-based metrics, some of which are exclusive to Ahrefs. For example, Clicks and Clicks Per Search can give you a better idea of how much traffic your content can get. That’s a burning issue today – many queries never translate into clicks because Google reveals answers for them at the top of SERP (i.e., Knowledge Card).

Ahrefs also uses a unique algorithm to calculate Keyword Difficulty (KD). It’s based on a major factor that Google evaluates to determine rankings – backlinks.

While Ahrefs isn’t totally free, it does have a free version allowing you to check 10 keyword ideas for your seed keyword.

Putting it all together — a keyword research strategy for 2022

Don’t let my comments at the beginning about the Google Ads Keyword Planner put you off using it. It’s still a very useful tool, if you use it the right way (and if you have a Google Ads account).

Sure, just typing in a keyword like “home insurance” and using it to generate long-tail keyword ideas for you isn’t going to work very well, for the reasons explained earlier.

But it’s still very useful for getting search volume data (provided your account still shows this), which is helpful when choosing which of the many keywords you’ve found to focus on (although you should take these estimates with a pinch of salt, they are still useful in indicating the relative search volumes of different keywords, even if the absolute estimates are a little off).

And there are a couple of little tweaks that can encourage it to spit out some useful long-tail keywords, that it may not find ordinarily.

The first one is to feed some of it’s own long-tail keyword suggestions back in to it as seed keywords. This will make it generate new keywords, that weren’t in the original suggestions.

The second one is to put a competitor’s landing page in the ‘your landing page’ field (because you presumably don’t have one yet for this keyword). Try a few of the pages that rank highly in Google for terms like the ones you are considering using.

That will make AdWords Keyword planner come up with some more keywords that you know have been successful for similar content.

Combine all these tools to find the best keywords

The best way is to combine all 4 of these free keyword tools to come up with a long list of keyword suggestions, and then screen them for competitive difficulty, and reasonable search volume, using KW Finder or Long Tail Pro, to end up with your final keyword list.

You’ll come up with so many keywords using this method, that when you’ve refined them down by making your own choices, you’re unlikely to have picked the exact same keywords as everybody else. But you should have found a good selection of long-tail keywords without too much competition, and with a reasonable search volume between them.

And that was our goal!

Latent Semantic Indexing

What really matters for SEO these days, is in-depth and comprehensive coverage of a topic.

To rank well for a search query, you really need to answer all aspects of a query, covering all sorts of related queries as well.

In short, you need to be the best resource to answer that query.

Google uses a technique called latent semantic indexing to discover what a page is about from its contents.

Google can then display results, even if the search query doesn’t match exactly the keywords used, because Google knows what the page is about, not just the keywords used.

Latent semantic indexing keywords (LSI keywords) are keywords that Google believes are related to the same topic.

The more of these you can weave into your content, the more likely you are to rank for keywords you haven’t even thought of yet.

As well as the ones you’ve carefully chosen.

So once you’ve found and researched your main keywords, find some juicy LSI keywords, and make sure your content addresses these as well.

A really good tool for finding latent semantic indexing keywords (LSI keywords), that I’ve just discovered is LSI Graph.

You just enter your main keywords, and it comes up with a boat load of semantically related keywords for you to use as well.

If you want to see the other tools I use for growing my business online, see my Tools & Resources page.

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