Super Simple Keyword Research Tips For Your Miva Merchant Site
Today’s guest blog post comes from Gillian Muessig, President and Co-Founder of SEOmoz.
Being found in the SERPs (Search Engine Results Pages) when folks are looking for your products/services is the key to ecommerce success. That process, keyword research, starts with understanding which words folks are typing into the search engines when they need something you might be able to provide to them. So where do you start?

Google Adwords
Even if you don’t use paid ads, set up a Google Adwords account and start searching for keywords you intuitively know are important to your business. You may be surprised at the other keywords that pop up in the results box. With this simplest of all starts, you may find thousands (or more) searchers are using terms you hadn’t thought of.

Check Your Internal Search
This amazing source for locating powerful keywords sits at our fingertips and very few site owners ever take a deep look into it. The search box on your website will tell you exactly what customers who bothered not only to click through your online organic listings, ads, social media, citations, and inbound links are looking for on your website that they cannot find. That’s the critical piece: these folks are searching for stuff to buy on your website and they are not FINDING it!.
- Create landing pages and optimize them for the keywords you find most frequently in your internal search.
- Consider selling products that you may not carry today, but consistently find in your search box results.
- Put super-popular products right onto your home page, reducing the time and effort it takes for buyers to get to the product(s).

Follow The Money (Backwards)
Check the terms that brought you sales. The most popular free analytics tool to let you see this info is Google Analytics. I highly recommend that you have it and use it no less than weekly, preferably far more frequently. Track things that go ‘right’. In other words, look at people who buy, those who buy more, and those who buy frequently.
Which search terms bring them to your website? Do these searchers consistently use your internal search to locate products? What search engine or other source do they arrive from? If they arrive from pages that are not search engines, what terms brought them to your website? It was probably a keyword or key phrase that linked to your site, so grab those keywords. They obviously convert for you.

Ask Sales And Customer Service
If your business is very small, you’re probably wearing almost all the “hats” in your company. When thinking about keywords, think like a sales person or customer service person. In other words, think about the words your customers use when talking to you about your products. You know you’re selling lavender wodgets, but all your first time customers call it a “purple widget”. These are super-valuable keywords, especially in B2B industries, where finding new clients depends on educating your potential market. Start with the words they use; then you can educate them, providing them with the language of TribalSpeak.
Listen carefully to your industry’s TribalSpeak - the language that you and your colleagues use when talking about your products/industry. These are the terms seasoned buyers will use. For new lead-gen, you’ll want non-TribalSpeak terms; for staying in front of your existing market, you’ll want the TribalSpeak terms.

Competitive Research
Do a search to determine the keywords your competitors are using. A site search is a search (shown in Google below) which limits the results to pages on a specific website. In this case, I asked Google to show me all the page results on the website, “www.SEOmoz.org” that rank for the term “SEO tools.” By looking at the content of these pages, I may be able to glean additional keywords that I haven’t thought of.

Once I have my initial keyword list built, I’ll check to see how difficult it will be to rank for these terms. I use the Keyword Difficulty Tool at SEOmoz.org. While this is not a free tool - and all the other tips above are free to use - I will provide an in-depth look at how to use this tool for the next Miva Merchant Newsletter issue and I’ll provide a code so you can all check it out for free. Stay tuned….
—Gillian Muessig
@SEOmoz & @SEOmom
CEO Coach at WebmasterRadio.fm
Join the Discussion
- August 03, 2011
nice…!
- August 04, 2011
This article had great tips. But how do I look at my internal search? Is this data available without a module? How do I find it?
- August 04, 2011
Hi Dave,
Brennan from Miva is going to hop in here and give us step by step instructions to access the internal search query info. #Goldmine!
This is why I love Miva!
- August 04, 2011
Hey Dave -
Miva does not store that information if you are using the built in search. If you are using a 3rd party search module like Power Search, that data is available under the module settings in utilities.
We will typically setup Google Analytics to capture this data of us. It has the ability to track site search and show you exactly what customers are searching for on your site for our built in search or any third party module.
To set this up, it has to be configured in Google Analytics under your profile settings. Once turned on it will ask for query parameter to look for that contains the search term. Typically we will just put in the word “search”
Then back in Miva we’ll use the Free KSE Google Analytics Module to configure the search page to use the query parameter of “search” as well. This allows Google to see what everyone is searching for on your website.
Hope this helps. If you need further help, email me directly and I can send you some screenshots
- August 04, 2011
Thanks Brennan!
I wasn’t aware I could configure Google Analytics for that. I’ll get on it.
This should be a great source of information and I’m looking forward to tracking it.
Dave
- September 08, 2011
There are no words to describe how boadcoius this is.


