Keyword research is how you discover the exact words your buyers type when they are looking for what you offer — so you can build pages that meet them there. For B2B, it is about intent and relevance, not raw volume. Here is a practical approach.
Start with your buyer, not a tool
List the problems your ideal clients have and the phrases they would use to describe them. Talk to sales, read enquiry emails, and note the questions prospects ask. This grounds your research in real language.
Understand search intent
Every search has an intent behind it — learning, comparing, or ready to buy. Map keywords to each stage: problem-aware (“why are my leads not converting”), solution-aware (“marketing automation for B2B”), and ready-to-buy (“B2B web designer Melbourne”). Match the page to the intent.
Judge volume, difficulty, and value together
A high-volume term is worthless if it never converts, and a low-volume term can be gold if it signals a ready buyer. Weigh search volume against how hard it is to rank and how valuable the visitor is. For B2B, a handful of the right buyers beats a flood of browsers.
Map keywords to pages
Give each important keyword or cluster its own page, built to answer that search better than anyone. Do not target the same term with multiple pages — you will compete with yourself. This is the foundation of SEO for B2B websites.
Frequently asked questions
What tools do I need?
Free tools like Google autocomplete, related searches, and Search Console go a long way. Paid tools add depth but are not essential to start.
Should I chase high-volume keywords?
Not blindly. For B2B, intent and relevance usually matter more than volume.
How many keywords should a page target?
One primary keyword or a tight cluster of closely related terms per page.
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