HeyRahat

🧨I don't see a lot of people talking about the Intitle:"keyword" command 🧨

but It's actually so strong to have a sens of difficulty to rank on a certain keyword, here's why ⬇️

1 - Keyword Competition Analysis: By using intitle:"[keyword]", you can gauge how many websites are specifically targeting that keyword in their titles.

💠A lower number suggests less competition, potentially making it easier to rank for that keyword.

2 - Content Gap Identification: This operator can also help in identifying content gaps. If there are few results for a keyword you consider important, it might indicate an opportunity to create content that fills this gap.

💣Example💣

I typed In Google intitle:"men's best watch under 500"

I had 7 results showing up, I can guarantee you that if I'm doing an article on any website, even a new one, as soon as my article will be indexed this will rank top 10.

You obviously need to check if there's traffic on those keywords before doing so.

#AffiliateMarketing #SEO #KeywordResearch

1 year ago | [YT] | 1



@heyrahat

I have been using allintitle and intitle for 20 years. It's more reliable than 100% of Keyword Difficulty score by SEO Tools Don't use quotes With allintitle: <5000=low competition 5k to 10k=medium >10000=high With intitle: <10000=low 10k to 100k=medium >100 000=high Careful, Google is buggy with operators. Use common sense. You can also use allinanchor: to get a sense of competition, but no range to give you for that one.

1 year ago | 0