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Keywords Suggestion Tool


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About Keywords Suggestion Tool

100% Free No Sign-Up Any Seed Keyword Long-Tail Ideas Question Keywords

Every piece of content starts with a keyword — but the seed keyword you begin with is rarely the one you should be targeting. The real opportunity lies one step further: the related phrases, long-tail variations, question-format queries, and topic extensions that branch from any seed keyword and reveal how people actually search for information on that topic. A keyword suggestion tool takes any single word or phrase and expands it into a list of keyword ideas, giving you the raw material for a content strategy that reaches people at every stage of their search — not just the high-volume head terms dominated by large sites.

70%
Of all Google searches are long-tail keywords — 3+ words with specific intent
Lower
Competition on long-tail keywords — more realistic ranking targets for new pages
Higher
Conversion rate of long-tail traffic — more specific intent means more qualified visitors
1 seed
Keyword is all it takes — the tool expands it into dozens of targeted content ideas

What the Tool Returns

Enter any seed keyword and the tool generates related keyword suggestions grouped by type — variations, question-format keywords, LSI (related concept) terms, and long-tail phrases. Here is a sample output for the seed keyword "content marketing".

Each suggestion group targets a different type of search intent. Use them together to build a complete content cluster — not just a single page.

The Four Types of Keyword Suggestions — What Each One Is For

Keyword Variations

Direct variants of your seed term — the same topic approached from different angles or with different modifiers (best, free, online, tool, guide, 2025). Use these to find the specific phrasing your audience actually uses versus the phrasing you assumed they used. Often the variation with a modifier has less competition than the head term but nearly as much search demand. seed: "email marketing" → "email marketing tools", "email marketing free"

Question Keywords

Search queries that begin with how, what, why, when, where, or which. These are extremely valuable for two reasons: they map directly to FAQ sections and featured snippet opportunities, and they reveal the exact questions your audience is asking — giving you the content brief for a page that answers a real need rather than guessing. Google's "People Also Ask" boxes are almost entirely driven by question keywords. seed: "SEO" → "how does SEO work", "why is SEO important"

LSI / Related Terms

Semantically related terms that Google associates with your topic — not the same keyword rephrased, but connected concepts that appear on pages Google considers authoritative for your seed term. Including LSI terms in your content signals topical depth to Google. A page about "coffee" that also covers "espresso", "brewing methods", and "caffeine" shows broader expertise than one that only repeats the word "coffee". seed: "coffee" → "espresso", "brewing", "caffeine", "roast"

Long-Tail Phrases

3–6 word phrases with high specificity. Lower individual search volume than head terms, but significantly lower competition — and the combined traffic from many long-tail keywords often exceeds what a single head term provides. Long-tail searchers are also further along their intent journey: someone searching "best lightweight running shoes for flat feet under $100" is far closer to a decision than someone searching "running shoes". seed: "running shoes" → "best running shoes for flat feet women"

Short-Tail vs Long-Tail Keywords — Why Long-Tail Wins for Most Sites

Head Keywords (Short-Tail)

1–2 words. High volume, high competition.

  • Dominated by large, authoritative domains
  • Broad intent — hard to match a single page to
  • Very difficult to rank for as a newer site
  • High bounce rate — visitors may not find what they expected
  • Example: "shoes", "SEO", "coffee"
Long-Tail Keywords

3–6 words. Lower volume, lower competition.

  • More accessible for newer or smaller sites
  • Specific intent — easy to write a page that perfectly matches
  • Higher conversion rates due to clear search intent
  • 70% of all searches are long-tail — enormous collective reach
  • Example: "best running shoes for flat feet women"

The keyword suggestion tool is most valuable as a long-tail discovery engine. Start with a broad seed keyword related to your topic and let the tool surface the specific, lower-competition phrases where a single well-written page can realistically rank and bring in consistent organic traffic.

How to Use the Keyword Suggestion Tool

1

Enter a Seed Keyword

Type a word or short phrase that represents your topic — your product, your service, or a subject you want to write about. Keep it broad: "email marketing" rather than "email marketing software for ecommerce".

2

Review All Groups

Browse the variations, question keywords, LSI terms, and long-tail phrases. Do not just skim — the most useful keyword is often in a group you did not expect. Question keywords in particular often reveal content opportunities competitors have missed.

3

Pick Your Targets

Select keywords with the right balance of specificity and search intent. Long-tail phrases with clear intent (how, best, for + audience) are the highest-priority targets for content pages that can realistically rank and convert.

Pro tip: Use this tool iteratively — take a long-tail suggestion from your first search and enter it as the seed for a second search. Each layer reveals more specific, lower-competition keyword opportunities that your competitors likely haven't targeted yet.

When to Use This Tool

Planning a new piece of content

Before writing any article, guide, or landing page, run the main topic through the suggestion tool. The question keywords tell you what your audience is actually asking — write content that answers those questions, not content built around the phrase you guessed.

Expanding a thin topic into a content cluster

A single page on "email marketing" is hard to rank. A cluster of pages — each targeting a specific suggestion from this tool — builds topical authority across the whole subject area and gives Google a stronger signal that your site is the expert source.

Finding FAQ content for existing pages

The question keyword suggestions are ready-made FAQ content. Add them as an FAQ section to existing pages — this increases the page's semantic relevance, targets "People Also Ask" boxes, and improves the chance of earning featured snippets.

Researching competitor keyword gaps

Enter your competitor's main topic as a seed keyword. The long-tail suggestions reveal the specific phrases they may not have covered — content opportunities where you can rank by filling a gap they left open.

Finding keywords for meta descriptions and headings

LSI terms from the suggestion results are natural additions to H2 subheadings and meta descriptions — improving topical coverage without forcing awkward keyword repetition. This is how semantic SEO works in practice.

PPC campaign keyword expansion

Long-tail keyword suggestions make excellent Google Ads keywords — specific enough to have strong purchase intent, often with lower CPC than head terms due to lower advertiser competition. Use the suggestions as the foundation for tightly themed ad groups.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a seed keyword and how do I choose a good one?

A seed keyword is the starting word or phrase you enter to generate suggestions — the core topic you want to explore. A good seed keyword is broad enough to generate many related suggestions but specific enough to be relevant to your audience. Examples:

  • Too broad: "marketing" — generates thousands of unrelated results spanning every type of marketing
  • Good seed: "email marketing" — specific enough to generate relevant variations, questions, and long-tail phrases
  • Too narrow: "best free email marketing software for ecommerce under $50" — this is already a long-tail keyword itself, not a seed

A 1–3 word phrase representing a clear topic is usually the right level of specificity for a seed keyword.

What is the difference between keyword suggestions and keyword search volume?

This tool generates keyword ideas — it shows you what related phrases exist and are actively searched. It does not show exact monthly search volume for each suggestion. Search volume data requires access to paid tools like Ahrefs, SEMrush, or Google Keyword Planner. Use this tool first to discover which keyword ideas are worth researching, then validate search volume and competition for your priority targets using a dedicated keyword research tool. The suggestion tool is the ideation step; volume data is the validation step.

How many keywords should I target on one page?

One primary keyword (the main topic) plus several supporting keywords from the same intent cluster is the right approach. A page about "email marketing for small businesses" can naturally include variations like "email marketing tips for small business", "email marketing strategy beginners", and related LSI terms — all without forcing them. What you should avoid is trying to rank a single page for completely different keywords (like "email marketing" and "social media marketing") — create separate pages for separate intents. Use the suggestion groups from this tool to identify which keywords belong on the same page versus which ones each need their own dedicated page.

Is this tool completely free?

Yes — completely free, no account, no sign-up, no limits. Enter as many seed keywords as you need.