You probably know Overture and Wordtracker as well as AdWord Accelerator which a great tool in PPC management for sorting out the real competition among keywords and bid prices and singling out the best-performing ads. But there are others that give you a different emphasis and have features of their own that make them unique and very much worth having. AdWord Analyzer is one (www.AdWordAnalyzer.com). Keywords Analyzer is another (www.KeywordsAnalyzer.com).
When you need a screwdriver and you head to your toolbox chances are that you will have both a Philips and a slotted screwdriver. You have uses for both, so you keep both to use as needed. It is the same story for keyword tools. They all have their uses, and having more of them is like owning a complete set of tools.
Don’t stop discovery there. The initial string of keywords you get, long or not, is not complete. At one point AltaVista said that a whopping 20 percent of its total searches were completely unique. There is no knowing what a person will search for, but to help get a little better idea what they might be looking for here are some ideas:
You’ll want lots of synonyms and related subjects in your stockpile of keywords so that you can be sure you’re reaching people who are looking for what you’ve got.
Make a play for brand names as keywords, though you will most likely have to wade through copyright issues. Because it has allowed AdWords users to bid on trademark names, Google has had plenty of it’s own legal affairs. Anything related to your topic is worth looking into, celebrated people, noted places, company names, publications, group organizations all may be associated with what you are advertising. Such as the name of a celebrated golfer for “golf equipment” or the name of a famous guitar player for “guitars”
Misspellings are a big opportunity, because so many advertisers don’t bid on them, and the clickthrough rate is often higher. For a Lord of the Rings promotion, “Tolkein” (misspelled) got twice the CTR of “Tolkien” (spelled correctly).
LexFN.com is an effective website used to enhance pay-per-click management. It is a complex thesaurus that utilizes internet technology to search out arrays of related ideas and synonyms and compile them into your keyword list. So you aren’t just stuck with the common version of a word like WalMart but you will have variants like Wal-Mart and Wal Mart. “Expanded phrase matching” offered by Google will try, and often succeed, to duplicate this for you. Thos click will most often cost you more than exact matching, just the way folks type it in.