Google Trends - Find Keyword Data with Google's Trend Reporting Tool

MisterSteve
The fox, the fox, the fox.

Claire Danes is in the news. Along with a whole bunch of other people. Over at my celebrity site (mostly steaming hot pics, with an ad) I have been posting keyword rich content around the Google Trends top searches. For some reason, a lot of people searched for the fox. What the hell is the fox? Good question. I Googled the fox and got all kinds of neat stuff back, but not any one exploitable trend that I could base my keywords around. So if you got to this page from Google looking for The Fox, I'm just as confused as you.

Google trends is a keyword popularity tool that displays not only how often users searched for a term, but how many times they actually found the term. You can even combine keywords or phrases, separated by commas. Google trends search showed me a squiggly line that was consistently much higher than the squiggly line that represented the FOUND content. So people are looking a whole lot for a very small amount of material. Launching a niche site about foxes seems like a good idea, but the fox doesn't fit into my area of expertise.

Google trends gives fantastic data on ... um, trends. Google Trends, in fact. Google Trends showed me that the fox was being searched for a lot more than it was actually being found, pretty much consistently for quite some time. It also helps to do comparisons. MoneyMan searched the terms that he thought were the best money making keywords for his celebrity site, such as hot, sexy, pics etc etc so forth and so on. By searching up to 5 terms at once you can perform realtime comparisons of your promotional keyword data. Naturally, Google Tools is an indispensable weapon in the money making arsenal.

Published by MisterSteve

MisterSteve is a Florida native and spends most of his time being outraged at world political figures. Leaning both extremely left and extremely right on most topics, MisterSteve is conflicted only by logic.  View profile

1 Comments

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  • Pat Veretto7/7/2007

    Google Trends is an excellent tool, thanks for the reminder.

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