If you’re not yet ready to move on to advanced SEO for Ecommerce, I’ve written an introductory post about how to get started with the seo basics.

Maximizing the search engine visibility of your eCommerce website, for qualified queries, is perhaps the most important role SEO has to play in selling products online.

The idea of keyword spread is similar to an approach taken by stock options traders called a condor option; you are essentially increasing your keyword opportunities while lowering your overall risk.

By spreading your search engine rankings for as many qualified keywords as possible you are exponentially increasing the probability that your site will be seen and hopefully visited.

And to be fair (and clear) this strategy is not just for eCommerce, but for the purposes of this post I am going to focus on selling online, looking at websites that are effectively ranking for eCommerce intent keywords from head to long tail.

The nuts and bolts of this concept is about making sure you position the right content, for the right time, for the right person. If you’re taking a strategic approach to keyword spread, then your visitors are getting the right page at the right point in the conversion funnel, based on their search behavior and intent.

Think of this as more of a keyword funnel where the top of the funnel is informational and navigational-based content; content that helps to inform the visitor, present them with facts, data, and options but does NOT pitch them.

You are then ranking content at the commercial investigation phase, helping users to quickly gain insights into how your product stacks up against your competitors, the pro’s and con’s (yes! The con’s too, I’ll come back to this later in the post), pricing information and availability.

The end game here is to take the Google approach to information experience; provide as much as possible as quick as possible so users don’t have to look anywhere else.

I realize this is counter-intuitive from an eCommerce perspective, why would you ever want to provide competitive information to a prospective customer?

Simple, if you provide them with all the information they need, not only are you building trust through transparency, but they have no reason to go looking elsewhere for it.

All the gimmicks in the world won’t force someone to buy who is not ready to make the purchase. I’m not going to pretend that the checkout countdown used by major online retailers like Ticketmaster™ (shown below) and Fab.com doesn’t positively impact checkout conversions, however, I will say that for someone who is not ready to make the purchase – it is not going to force the purchase and stands a better chance of feeling pushy.

Sustainable brands are built on trust and customer loyalty. Think about it. Why settle for a 1-time purchase when you have the opportunity to sell to the same customer every time they want a product you sell?

These types of relationships are built through transparency:

If you are not the cheapest, say so, then explain why.

If you don’t have fancy stripes, buttons, or a slick new design, talk about it.

Contrary to what many people seem to still believe; consumers aren’t stupid. If the information is important to them, they are going to find it.

Keyword Spread Opportunity

Taking a lesson from my days in Finance, you can lower your risk for negative returns from search by making sure to spread your rankings across more purchase-intent SERP’s. Similar to a condor option, the wider your spread on target traffic, and the higher your average position, the less risk you have on not making your target return.

You need to be building awareness and mind-share throughout the buying cycle.

Searcher behavior starts with initial interest and information gathering. As shoppers begin to browse more specific queries they move through the conversion funnel.

Time For Some Ecommerce Examples

RevZilla is a Philly-based eCommerce company that sells a crap load of motorcycle gear.

They have done a fantastic job with their keyword spread, ranking for many of their target categories all the way from head to tail. They leverage this head term keyword authority to power rankings all the way down to the product level.

Best of all, they supplement their AdWords bids and campaigns to get your attention when their organic rankings are not as high. I imagine this is based on conversion rate; keywords that don’t have a high historical conversion rate are not a focus for organic, which is human capital intensive, and instead are just bid on in paid search.

Head Keyword: motorcycle jackets (click to enlarge)

Body Keyword: mens motorcycle jackets (click to enlarge)

Body Keyword: leather motorcycle jackets (click to enlarge)

Body Keyword: mens leather motorcycle jackets (click to enlarge)

Body Keyword: brown leather motorcycle jackets (click to enlarge)

Wanna See What’s Really Cool?

The head term keyword authority that RevZilla has been able to build has allowed them to position themselves very highly for contextually related brand terms.

Brand Keyword: Alpinestars (click to enlarge)

Yes. You’re seeing that right.

Alpinestars is a major brand retailer, with a pretty large social following including;

Over 1.7 Million Facebook Fans

Over 66,000 Twitter Followers

Yet their social profiles are being out-ranked in their brand SERP by a reseller, so for those who think SEO is dead, you need to wake up and smell the coffee.

Furthermore, this keyword authority transcends to more specific product category and product-specific search results:

Brand Body Keyword: alpinestars leather motorcycle jackets (click to enlarge)

Brand Long-Tail Keyword: Alpinestars GP-R Leather Jacket (click to enlarge)

Thank you to Peter Attia and John-Henry Scherck for sending along this great example.

ASOS is a UK-based online retailer of men and women’s clothes, they are also an SEO powerhouse.

ASOS is dominating organic, and has what I like to call a complimentary AdWords presence. What’s most impressive about there keyword spread is that they successfully hold top results for ton of brand keywords:

Brand Head Keyword: ray ban sunglasses (click to enlarge)

Brand Head Keyword: nike trainers (click to enlarge)

Brand Body Keyword: esprit chino shorts (click to enlarge)

And it’s not just the individual head terms, look here are their keyword spread for American Apparel queries:

Brand Head Keyword: american apparel tshirts

Brand head Keyword: mens american apparel

Brand Body Keyword: mens american apparel tshirts

Brand Long-Tail Keyword: mens american apparel vneck shirt

Wait, Notice Anything Strange?

Look closely at the Google shopping results for mens american apparel…

Yeah, no men. I can’t help but wonder if this is on purpose. And I know what you’re thinking – why on earth would they intentionally be displaying results for women for a mens query?

It may have something to do with this…

According to Google’s wonderful new Display Planner, it seems nearly just as many women may be searching for mens american apparel as men. Why not seize the opportunity to get some impressions for womens american apparel in case they decide they would rather be shopping for themselves instead 🙂

Thank you to Patrick Hathaway for the great example.

Last but certainly not least in my examples is Argos, another UK-based online retailer with a focus on home furnishings and toys (among many other verticals).

Admittedly, I’m not a fan of the URL architecture, as it’s pretty long and messy, however, their keyword spread is pretty amazing; take for example:

Head Keyword: pan set (click to enlarge)

Body Keyword: non stick pan set (click to enlarge)

Brand Body Keyword: Tefal non stick pan set (click to enlarge)

Do you SEE that last SERP? Argos is outranking the brand for it’s own product, which is pretty impressive to say the least.

Thank you to Wayne Barker for the great example.

How To Maximize Your Keyword Spread

This goes without saying, but in order to approach increasing the spread of your organic keywords, you first need to have completed your in-depth keyword research and a deep dive SEO competitive analysis.

This data is needed to help you figure out which pages will be the best candidates for which keywords, as well as which keywords are your highest priorities.

Once you know who your competitors are, what types of content is ranking for your high value keywords, and level of signaling that you’re competing with; i.e. on page factors, back link profile, social signals, etc. – you are ready to take this further:

1. Expand Your Semantic and Contextual Reach

Google has begun to look not only for keywords on the page, but also for groups of contextually relevant words. To such an extent that there is a patent recently reviewed by Bill Slawski that looks at the potential for parameterless search.

What does that mean? Imagine if you will being out and simply holding down a button on your phone and simply speaking “search now,” and based on your personal preferences and geo-location, Google returns a set of results.

Going back to Google’s keyword planner, we are going to look at what other words Google believes to be closely related at the category and product adjective level.

To get started, choose your category from the drop down menu and add just your head keyword, for example here’s a look at the keyword ‘ecommerce‘ within the ‘business and industrial‘ category (click to enlarge):

You can see pretty quickly from the image above that Google associates the keyword ‘ecommerce‘ primarily with software; every top-level term listed is related to software, solutions, a code base (such as PHP), etc.

If we add the word ‘optimization,’ this focus shifts to design and developers and completely away from software, with terms related to SEO and marketing starting to show up.

Let’s take a look at a query landscape that we have already become familiar with; motorcycle jackets – this time removing the category (click to enlarge).

Not surprising, Google associates these with motorcycles, leather, and jackets. What is surprising is that Google also see’s this as closely contextually related to varsity jackets, bomber jackets (hey that’s a good term), and the keyword ‘biker jacket’ – which receives over 12,000 exact searches per month.

Let’s take this a step further and take a look at what is rapidly becoming one of my favorite keyword research tools, the Display Planner, and for the purposes of this exercise make sure you set it to ‘Ad group ideas’ and then select ‘Keywords,’ it should look like this (click to enlarge):

Ready for the cool part? Hover your mouse over the right side of the ‘Ad group’ and a blue arrow will appear:

Now click on the yellow-highlighted keyword on the right-side under ‘Ad groups’:

And you will be be shown this list of contextually related keywords:

Scroll through for a list of body and long-tail suggestions, right from Google, based on it’s search network inventory (driven by actual searches).

2. Conduct a Keyword Performance Audit

Go into Google Analytics and look at the historical data for organic traffic keywords for the past 6 months.

Look for pages with high engagement and low organic search traffic by sorting in descending order for both pages per visit and average time on site.

For a detailed look at this process please check out conducting a keyword performance audit >

3. Use Hierarchy to Pass Relevance From Parent to Child Directories

I know I talk about this a lot, but it continues to become more important. This essentially means that if your information architecture is properly supported by your URL’s directory structure, than you may be able to create relevance for certain topic keywords, allowing for authority to be established faster for new sub-directories in the future.

What’s important to consider here is that the higher-level pages stand to receive more PageRank and flow less PageRank to the lower-level directories. The good news is utilizing this approach gives you an opportunity to potentially establish more authority for the parent directories, thus increasing their potential to rank for more competitive terms.

AirBnB does this fantastically, where they actually use just microdata mark-up to show which root-level directories are both up-stream and downstream, leading to optimized search engine listings such as:

which is literally being propagated just from the microdata formatting in the HTML, and NOT from an internal link structure.

4. Optimize Pages for Specific Product-Attribute Keywords

Nothing frustrates me more than seeing websites where multiple pages are carrying the same page-level keywords in the page title.

Similar to the problem with duplicate content, if your title tags contain the same focus keywords, Google is going to have a harder time determining which of those pages should be ranking for the keyword, and you may be cannibalizing your own rankings.

I’m not saying to throw out keywords that should be used across several titles, such as your brand or the brand of the products – I’m simply talking about not optimizing titles for the same category and product-level keywords.

One of the best ways to spread your titles across your target keywords is to leverage the ability of many modern eCommerce platforms to create new views, for example RevZilla carries a number of brown motorcycle jackets, which you can get to by going to motorcycle jackets and then using the left-side navigation to filter by color, giving you this anchor URL:

http://www.revzilla.com/motorcycle-jackets#v2-facets%5B%5D=339&page

=1&page_size=96&sort=featured&tab=all

What I would recommend to them instead, would be to use these color filters and create top-level directories for each of these colors.

Stop and think for a second about the naming conventions you have seen around other popular eCommerce websites, there tend to be a lot of opportunities to expand the reach of the products simply by creating new pages focused on 1 or 2 specific product attributes.

Lastly, remember when I said you should include as much content on your pages as is relevant to the searcher’s potential purpose, including competitor data? I bet you thought I was crazy.

But think about this for a second: If you include what your product does well, what your competitor’s product does well, and draw a line between the differences, you are not only getting more contextually relevant content onto your pages, you are preventing the user from having to go out and mine for that information.

You become the resource, and you build trust, so chances are even if they go to your competitor’s website to verify your information (which better be accurate) you have established a piece of mindshare that is likely to reflect positively on your brand.

5. Use Related Content in Place of Products

This is a very common problem in niche eCommerce. You are selling products that people want, but there is absolutely no aggregated search volume (or very low aggregate search volume) and you can’t justify building pages and links for a query that receives let’s less than 100 searches per month.

What do you do?

You build content for queries that surround the product but aren’t the product.

What does that mean?

Perhaps my favorite example is ReadyForZero’s page on budgeting tips. This is a fantastic example of an in-depth piece of content that is positioned to capture searchers at the top of the conversion funnel, focusing on informational intent queries, and educating visitors who obviously have a need for ReadyForZero’s money management products.

Wrapping It Up

This is part of a series of posts themed by SEO audit guidelines for online businesses.

The end game here is rank as highly as possible for as many qualified keywords as possible.

Look for opportunities to build new pages, better optimize titles and meta attributes to target language around the specific attributes of your products, and leverage your available technology to create new category and sub-category pages where appropriate.

Get your advanced SEO analysis right now! Request a quote!

Pay close attention the language Google uses not only in tools talked about in this post, but also look at the language that is on the pages that are currently in the top 10 results. What other words are helping these URL’s signal to Google that they are a good result for the query.

To take this a step further, you need to make sure that you are optimizing the right pages for the right queries. If the query is informational (like the ReadyForZero example, budgeting tips) make sure you are ranking a page that provides informational content. And likewise, if the query is transactional – you need to make sure that you are optimizing product detail pages.

Lastly, what are some of your favorite eCommerce websites that are killing it in terms of search rankings for head through long-tail keywords?