Wordze keyword research tool review
Let’s take Wordze the new keyword research tool for a spin.
Site: Wordze.com
Product: Wordze Keyword Research Tool
Price: $7.95 for one day, $35.00 monthly subscription
Pros: Every thing you could ask for in keyword research. Beats Wordtracker.
Cons: The only drawback is the amount of information available for each kw. It’s real easy to get tied up in your pantyhose instead of searching more keywords.
Dinkrating: 5 out of 5
After the payment is processed a login page is loaded. When the login is finished you have an impressive series of options to choose from. Find keywords, historical trends, what it takes to rank in the top 10, import keywords, dig into the search engines (what other words are being optimized for), download last month kw search history, download saved keyword results, expand results with their database, and a help page. Pretty neat.
The first step is to select the find keywords option. Then enter the keyword. There is a drop down marked as ‘options’ which allows you to fine tune your search. So the keyword is entered the ’search keyword database’ button is clicked.
In less than one minute (24 seconds) the application returned 49936 keywords for the term diet. Wow! Next clicked on the ’save all’ button (10k kw saved), then clicked the ‘download’ button. The download options are Excel or text file, and a choice of numbering the list or not. Clicking on download produces the expected file in a zip format. Cool.
So, now select one of your favorites from the list. What I chose is secret (heh). Click on the ‘WordRank’ icon to see what it will take to make it big time with your kw. Whoa! Looks like I’ll have to get the links machine moving. It’ll take about 6k inbounds to make it up there.
The WordRank page shows nine top sites with all of their stats for you to see. Links, links per month, domain pr, and URL pr. Farther down the page you get a graph of the links per month for the sites. Man that one site gets 12k links per month. I got a ways to go to get there.
Farther down is a list of the sites showing intitle match, inurl match, edu links, and gov links. Now that’s cool. Finally there is graph showing the origins of the searches. At the bottom of the page you get the option to download all of this data. You bet I did!
Back on the first results page, click on the ‘Dig’ icon. A page loads and says the Search Engine Digger will inspect 10k sites to find what other webmasters are optimizing for and return the results in an Excel format for download. This search takes substantially more time, but it should, the results are amazing.
That’s enough for you to get an idea of the value of Wordze. I could go on, but I’ve got a lot more keywords to research. You can get Wordze here.
~Dink



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