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posted by Clive on August 6, 2008
{{adam}}I was popping by Google’s Inside Adwords Blog today and read a post about a new tool called “Insights for Search.” I tested it out and was impressed at what I saw so here is a review and some notes on how to utilize Insights for Search
The idea of this tool is to give the end user a glimpse into some search history, compare peaks and valley’s to news articles (much the same way Google Trends did) but also give a user the ability to understand search behaviour. It has some really powerful features, especially for an Internet Marketing agency like ours
Some very cool features include a “heat map” of the world or any geographic region you want to target and the corresponding rising search terms for a particular keyword you are examining. Additionally, you can compare up to 5 search terms and see how a users search habits differ across geographic areas. For example, if you are in the market for Laisk surgery – the west coast of the U.S. might be more inclined to use the search phrase “lasik eye surgery” while the east coast might use the phrase “laser eye surgery” more often. As an advertiser, it is important to segment these keywords and phrases depending on the target market you are focused on.
Furthermore, you can filter your queries by various categories. One example might be “java” which will have a different meaning depending on if you are looking for a programming language or a hot cup of coffee. Using the category drop down will allow you to segment the data accordingly.
You can also look at search trends by a particular date range. The default is set to 2004 – present but opening the drop down allows you to select some set ranges as well as a custom range.
Comparing your data by “location” and “time ranges” is also an option which can present some very powerful data but only for the top searches for the day, not custom keywords you select.
The tool also has a handy export feature to excel.
I was puzzled by the numbers that appear in the graph and upon further investigation found that these aren’t actual search numbers but rather “normalized” numbers that Google is displaying. You can read more about this here.
Seamless Development
August 7, 2008
Guess I never really thought that keywords would make a difference when dealing with different parts of the country like you mentioned: west coast VS east coast. This definitely changes my line of thinking.
Levert Marketing
August 7, 2008
Nice tool. It looks a lot like Google Trends but with some added features. I will give it a try next time I need to target a specific area.
Heather
August 8, 2008
Good to know for national business, thanks.
hotels
August 29, 2008
I can learn on everyday something. I built this new web-marketing information into my SEO knowledge. You gave to me an idea for a topic on a SEO forum, thanks
Kazelgjj
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Kazeldyj
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Kazelcev
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Kazeljdc
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Kazelmlp
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Kazelsal
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Kazelocm
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Kazelcsv
September 6, 2008
Hi webmaster!
Laguna Niguel Real Estate
November 30, 2008
Informative post. This is very useful tool.