Why keyword selection matters for PPC
The keywords you bid on determine when your ads appear and who clicks them. Pick the wrong ones, and you're burning budget on tire-kickers. Pick the right ones, and you hit intent-matched prospects ready to convert.
PPC keyword research isn't guesswork. It's a mix of search intent analysis, volume validation, cost modeling, and competitive intelligence. You need to understand what your customers actually search for, when they're ready to buy, and how much you'll pay to reach them.
1. Clarify your search intent goal
Before you open Google Keyword Planner, decide who you're targeting.
High-intent (bottom-funnel) users are searching to buy. They use branded terms, product names, or transactional queries. They're further along the journey and more likely to convert. But keywords here are competitive and expensive.
Low-intent (top-funnel) users are exploring. They search for category terms, comparisons, or related problems. They're earlier in the journey, cheaper to reach, and higher in volume — but further from a sale.
Most campaigns need both. Start by mapping which intent tier fits your goal. If you have budget headroom and a small addressable market, focus high-intent. If you need volume or want to build awareness, add low-intent keywords. Your budget and available search volume will guide the mix.
2. Mine your landing pages for keyword ideas
Your landing pages already contain keyword clues. Open the pages your ads will link to and look for repeated phrases, product names, and problem statements in the headline, subheads, and body copy.
Well-written pages naturally reflect how customers talk about your solution. That's your starting list. It keeps you aligned with message-to-landing-page relevance, which also improves Quality Score and click-through rates.
3. Use keyword research tools to expand and validate
Google Keyword Planner is free and standard. It shows you estimated monthly search volume, competition level, and suggested bid ranges for each term. Use it to:
- Discover keyword variants you didn't think of.
- Spot long-tail keywords with lower competition but real volume.
- Get a rough CPC estimate before you commit budget.
Don't rely on Planner alone. Cross-check volume and CPC in your Google Ads account's auction insights, and look at SERP position data (rank tracking tools show where organic competitors sit for each keyword).
4. Evaluate volume, CPC, and conversion potential
Not all keywords are created equal. Score each one on two axes:
Monthly search volume: How often people search that term. High volume = more clicks, more competition, higher CPC. Low volume = cheaper clicks, fewer impressions. Balance this against your budget and conversion rate.
Cost per click (CPC): What you'll pay when someone clicks your ad. Higher CPC usually signals stronger commercial intent (and tougher competition). If CPC is $5 and your average order value is $30, the math works. If it's $20, you need a high conversion rate to break even.
The sweet spot is moderate volume, reasonable CPC, and keyword intent that matches your offer. Don't just chase volume or low costs. Aim for keywords that are affordable and likely to convert.
5. Audit competitor keywords
Search your direct competitors by name in Google. Look at the ads that appear in the top three to five positions. Note which competitors show up and what ad copy they're running.
Then use your own Google Ads account or a competitor research tool to identify the keywords they're bidding on. Ask yourself:
- Are these high-volume keywords I missed?
- Do they align with my conversion goals, or are they spending on awareness?
- Can I win on CPC or Quality Score for the same terms?
Competitor keywords are a shortcut to validation. If a competitor is bidding on it profitably, there's likely real intent there. But don't copy blindly. Your business model, audience, and landing page may make different keywords more profitable for you.
Build your keyword list and test
Combine insights from your landing pages, keyword tools, metrics analysis, and competitor research. Start with 20–40 keywords (not 1,000). Group them by intent tier and product. Set a CPC ceiling based on your conversion economics. Launch, track conversion rate by keyword, and pause or bid down keywords that waste budget. Add new ones weekly based on search term reports.
Keyword research isn't a one-time task. It's a feedback loop. Every conversion, every wasted click, every seasonal shift in search volume is data that reshapes your next list.