How to measure keyword difficulty.

Muhammad Umar
4 min readSep 22, 2020

Oh Snap! I almost tripled my organic traffic in a few months without building links. And in this video, I’m going to show you exactly how to measure keyword difficulty so that you can pick the right keywords and get more free search traffic to your website. Stay tuned. [music] Hey guys, Sam Oh here with Ahrefs, the SEO tool that helps you grow your search traffic, research your competitors and dominate your niche. This is the final video in our keyword research series. And in the first two videos we covered key fundamentals that will help you do effective keyword research and I showed you a few cool ways to generate thousands of great keyword ideas. This tutorial is all about measuring keyword difficulty and then targeting the ones you actually have a high chance of ranking for in Google’s top 10 search results. So, let’s jump right in. So for our first example, I’ll go to Keywords Explorer and type in “supplements.” Now, I touched on the keyword difficulty metric here in part one of this series, but I didn’t go too in-depth. And that’s because this section here is meant to just give you a top level view of how hard it will be to rank on Google for this target keyword. And you can see that it has a keyword difficulty score of 77 and it says that I need 291 websites to rank in the top 10 for this keyword. But is that really so? . Not necessarily. This part here, where it says you’ll need291 links from different websites to rank in the top 10 isn’t a super crazy algorithm. We just take a weighted average of the top 10 Google rankings. Also, something that keyword difficulty doesn’t take into consideration are on-page factors, relevance of the topic, and if the backlink sare do follow or contextual. So the best way to gauge the difficulty of a keyword is to look at the top 10 Google rankings, manually examine the quality of their backlinks and see what they’re doing.

And you can see all of this information by scrolling down to the SERP overview. Now, if you look at the top 10 search results ,you might be a bit confused. Vitamin Shoppe ranks quite high with only4 referring domains, ODS or the Office of Dietary Supplements ranks below that even though they have thousands of referring domains. And looking even further below that, this page has just less than 20 referring domains, yet keyword difficulty said that we need almost300 unique linking websites. So what gives? One word: relevance! When you look at the top ranking pages, you’ll see that the majority of them are eCommerce pages, which shows that there’s a good chance that someone searching for the keyword phrase “supplements,” is looking to shop. Now, looking at this result from ODS, you’ll see that it’s a home page where people have to navigate to find what they’re looking for. And in this case, I would suspect that this isn’t really what people are looking for. And even though the page may not perfectly match the searcher’s intent, they still rank quite high because they just have way too many backlinks compared to the other ranking sites. For the other site down here that has very few unique sites linking to them, you’ll see that they match what I believe is the searcher’s intent for this keyword, which you can see is an eCommerce category page. If you’re new to analyzing keyword difficulty, then that might have been a bit heavy. So let me review this quick keyword difficulty process fast. First, search for a keyword phrase in Keywords Explorer. Second, I’ll scroll down to look at the top 10 search results and look at the raw number of referring domains. And if you notice something like this one that has vastly more referring domains, but ranks lower than ones like these that haveless unique linking websites, then look at the titles and visit the pages to get a betterunderstanding of how Google tries to serve the searcher’s intent. And we already know that these are ecommercecategories, which shows that there is likely some kind of intent to shop whenpeople search for “supplements.” And this goes to prove that just using thereferring domains alone to gauge keyword difficulty isn’t always the most reliable either. Let’s look at another example. If I look at the top 10 search results forthe search query, “how to write a cover letter,” you’ll see these results. And aside from SERP features, the top rankingpage has 55 referring domains, and the one down here from Wikihow, has 209 referring domains. And if we look at the titles, both seem tobe perfectly relevant to what a searcher would be looking for. Now, this is where you would need to takean extra step and research the websites that are linking to these pages. So, if we look at Up to Work’s homepage,it looks like they offer a resume building tool, which suggests that the rest of thecontent, and this article on cover letters is going to be closely related to employment.

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Muhammad Umar

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