In this report, we give you all the in-depth SEO metrics you need to make quick and informed decisions about a keyword.
Use the dropdown next to the search bar to select the country you would like to see data for.
Below are some actionable ways to use this report.
Search volume shows the number of times a keyword is searched per month in a given country.
For example, the query “how to lose weight” gets 60,000 searches per month in the United States alone.
Global search volume is the sum of searches from all countries.
If we go with the same query as before, we’ll notice it has a global search volume of ~205,000 monthly searches.
So if your customer base is global, you might want to look at global volumes rather than country-specific search volumes.
Keyword Difficulty estimates how hard it will be to rank in the top 10 for a given keyword. It's scored on a scale from 0-100.
For example, the query “how to lose weight” has a Keyword Difficulty score of 90.
To calculate it, we look at the number of referring domains pointing at the current top-ranking pages.
If you hover over each KD score, you’ll see the estimated number of backlinks from different websites you need to rank on the first page for this keyword.
Learn more about Keyword Difficulty here.
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Keyword Difficulty isn’t meant to discourage you from ranking for a particular keyword. It’s intended to help you estimate the resources required to rank for it. If ranking for a keyword is vital for your business, you may still want to pursue it, even if the KD score is high.
Traffic potential shows the sum of organic traffic that the #1 ranking page for your target keyword receives from all the keywords that it ranks for.
See it as the potential traffic you could get, if you were to overtake the #1 ranking page.
For example, the keyword “submit website to search engines” has a traffic potential of 6,200, even though it only has a volume of 500.
The Clicks metric shows the average number of clicks that happen on the search results page.
For example, the query “Google founders” gets ~7,300 searches per month, but the search results are only clicked ~1,800 times.
The reason: not all searches result in clicks.
For example, if you search for “Google founders," you get an answer instantly, so there's no need to click on a result.
In general, you can use the Clicks metric to decide if a keyword is worth targeting. If a keyword has a high search volume but a low number of clicks, you might not get much organic traffic, even if you rank well.
The Cost-Per-Click (CPC) metric shows the average cost of a click on the paid search results for a given keyword.
For example, the query “project management software” has a CPC of $8.
Use this to gauge PPC competition, and decide if you want to compete.
You can also use the CPC metric to get a sense of whether a query has commercial value. Generally speaking, the higher the CPC, the more likely that is.
A high CPC keyword with lots of clicks may be worth ranking for in organic search as it could be very lucrative.
Parent Topic determines if you can rank for your target keyword while targeting a more general topic instead.
To identify the Parent Topic, we take the #1 ranking page for your keyword and find the query responsible for sending the most search traffic to that page.
For example, let’s say you own a fitness site and you wish to teach people how to do lunges with weights. If you analyze the query “how to do lunges with weights," you’ll see that the search volume is 400. However, the Parent Topic is “dumbbell lunges”.
Looks like the #1 result for this query gets an estimated 5,200 monthly search visits.
This is likely a better target.
Keywords Explorer runs on a vast database of ~20.4 billion keywords for Google. For any keyword you enter, we’ll show you the top five keywords from our keyword ideas reports.
This gives you some insight into other related queries people are making at a glance.
If you want more keyword ideas, you can choose from one of three different keyword ideas reports:
Matching terms - Keyword ideas that contain your target keywords or phrases
Related terms - Keyword ideas that are related to your seed keywords or phrases
Search suggestions - “Autocomplete” suggestions for your target query and related terms
SERP (search engine results page) position history shows historic rankings for the current top-ranking pages.
This is useful for checking SERP volatility—the fluctuations in ranking positions among top-ranking pages.
For example, the graph for the keyword “football” indicates that the top-ranking pages are continually fluctuating. This may be a sign of unclear or varying search intent over time, as football can mean different sports depending on the continent that you live in.
Some SEOs see this as an opportunity to rank, whereas others prefer predictability through stable SERPs. However, stability in the first page may also mean that the keyword is more challenging to crack.
Ad history chart shows the pages that were advertised on Google for your target keyword.
This is helpful in telling us about whether or not a keyword has high commercial value. In our case, it looks like “crm software” is quite a commercial topic.
You can also hover over an ad to view its ad copy and take inspiration from its title and supporting text.
The SERP Overview shows the first page of the search results for your keyword, along with the most important SEO metrics.
With it, you can see the following SEO metrics for each of the top 10 pages:
Word count
Domain Rating (DR) and URL Rating (UR)
Number of backlinks and referring domains
Estimated monthly organic traffic in the target country and its value
Number of keywords it's ranking for in the target country
The keyword that sends the most organic traffic in the target country
Search volume for the “top keyword” in the target country.
This allows you to quickly assess the top-ranking pages and understand why these pages are ranking where they are.
Study SERPs for the same keyword on different dates to spot any ranking changes.
For example, if we compare the current SERPs for the keyword “how to lose weight” with the ones from six months ago, only 1 search result has kept its position, while 3 were lost, 1 is new, and the rest have fluctuated. From here, we can infer the topic is volatile.
You can also compare two different keywords to see if Google perceives them as similar or not.
Let’s take “whipped coffee” and “dalgona coffee”. These should mean the same thing, right? Wrong.
Although they’re technically the same thing, Google perceives them as two different entities. A fact confirmed by the low SERP similarity score (10/100).
So you might be better off at targeting them separately with two different pages.
How to analyze yours and your competitors’ websites with Site Explorer
How to master keyword research with Keywords Explorer
How to improve your on-page and technical SEO with Site Audit
How to track and improve your Google rankings with Rank Tracker
How to discover untapped keyword and link building opportunities with Content Explorer
How to get keyword and link building opportunities on autopilot with Alerts