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#435 – Amazon Keyword Research & Analytics Masterclass: Magnet & Keyword Tracker

Video of the episode at the bottom

Are you struggling to find the right keywords for your Amazon product? We’ve got you covered! Tune in to the latest episode of the Seller Strategy Masterclass in SSP, where Bradley Sutton shares his top strategies for using keyword analytics and keyword research using a couple of Helium 10 tools.
 
Bradley covers everything from Helium 10 Magnet strategies to Keyword Tracker strategies, giving you a comprehensive overview of how to discover hidden gems and skyrocket your profits. With tips on finding loosely related keywords, identifying common root words, and tracking organic and sponsored ranks, this episode is a must-listen for any Amazon and Walmart seller looking to level up their keyword game with the help of Helium 10’s tools.
 
So, what are you waiting for? Make sure to listen to the very end of this episode and start using these tips and strategies to take your Amazon and Walmart sales to newer heights!

In episode 435 of the Serious Sellers Podcast, Bradley talks about: 

  • 01:30 – What Are We Talking About In This Episode?
  • 02:40 – Magnet Strategy #1: How To Find Loosely Related Keywords To An Individual Keyword Phrase? 
  • 05:00 – Magnet Strategy #2: How To Get Top Level Information On A Group Of Keywords?
  • 07:00 – Magnet Strategy #3: How To Find The most common root words with a list of keywords
  • 08:50 – Magnet Strategy #4: How To Find Long Tail Keywords That Share A Certain Root
  • 11:25 – Magnet Strategy #5: How To Find Keywords That Would Potentially Come Up In A Phrase Or Broad PPC Campaign
  • 13:25 – Magnet Strategy #6: How To See The Keywords In A Niche That Are Trending Up Over The Last 30 Days?
  • 16:00 – Strategy #7: How To See The Keywords In A Niche Where No One Product Is Dominating Sales
  • 16:00 – Strategy #8: How To Find Common Root Words In An Overall Keyword Niche
  • 21:15 – Strategy #9: Find Sub Niches By Searching For Root Niche Phrase
  • 27:15 – Keyword Tracker Strategy #1: How To Track Your Organic Ranks Both Now And Historically
  • 28:45 – Keyword Tracker Strategy #2: How To Track Your Sponsored Ranks Both Now And Historically
  • 31:40 – Keyword Tracker Strategy #3: How To Track Your Relative Rank Between You And Your Competitors
  • 35:00 – Keyword Tracker Strategy #4:  How To Keep Track Of Keyword Experiments And Campaigns
  • 36:35 – Keyword Tracker Strategy #5: How To Check Your Rank 24 Times A Day With Different Browsing Scenarios
  • 39:55 – Keyword Tracker Strategy #6: How To Cross-Check Search Query Performance With Keyword Tracker
  • 43:00 – It’s Time To Start Using These Tips And Strategies!

Transcript

Bradley Sutton:

Today’s another edition of our Seller Strategy Masterclass, where we’re gonna go deep into keyword analytics and also a little bit of keyword research that you could use for enhancing your own product or even finding new product opportunity. How cool is that? Pretty cool I think.

Bradley Sutton:

Do you wanna be able to sync your listings that you create in Helium 10 to your Amazon account in one click, including being able to sync subject matter, which you’re not able to even edit. Now, in most listings on Amazon, you’re gonna want to use Helium 10 Listing Builder. Make sure to find out how to use Listing Builder by going to h10.me/listingbuilder. That’s h10.me/listingbuilder. Hello everybody and welcome to another episode of the Serious Sellers Podcast by Helium 10. I am your host, Bradley Sutton. And this is the show that’s a completely BS free, unscripted, and unrehearsed organic conversation about serious strategies for serious sellers of any level in the e-commerce world. And this is another edition of our Serious Sellers Masterclass. No, that’s not what we call, we call it the Seller Strategy Masterclass. Too many S’s here.

Bradley Sutton:

I sometimes hard to keep track, but this is something we’ve been doing once a month where instead of having to guess, we just go deep into actual actionable strategies, like things that you guys can do either with Helium 10 or with your seller central account that will hopefully help get your results. And today we’re gonna be mainly talking about some analytics. We’re gonna be talking about some keyword research and how you can even do some product research while you’re doing keyword research. Now, you’ll notice I’m wearing one of the old school Helium 10 logos here, the throwback jersey version cuz we’re gonna go into a couple of tools in Helium 10 that were some of the original ones from like way back in 2017. One of them is Magnet and the other one is Keyword Tracker. But we’re not just gonna be doing only Helium 10.

Bradley Sutton:

I might, I might throw in a little bit of some Brand Analytics or Search Query Performance in here too. But again, the point is whether you’re using Helium 10 or not, I’m sure you might have access to some kind of tool that has very similar strategies. And these are strategies that every level of Amazon sellers and even Walmart sellers need to actually take. Everything I talk about today pretty much can be applied to both Amazon sellers and Walmart sellers. Let’s go ahead and get into the first one. First one, real simple, How to find loosely related keywords to an individual keyword phrase? So maybe you just have this random idea of a keyword or you’re already selling on Amazon and this is your main keyword for your niche. What are you going to do in order to find loosely related keywords?

Bradley Sutton:

You’re gonna enter Magnet. All right, so for example, what I’m doing here on the screen, those of you watching this on YouTube I just typed in gothic decor, and now there are, what do we have here? Let’s see, almost 5,000 keywords that came up. Now, these keywords come from other products that are ranking highly for gothic decor. Where are they also showing up for in organic results? Where are they showing up for in Smart Complete, we’re gonna talk about that a little bit later. And of those products, what are some other keywords that show up as Amazon recommend? All right, so this came up with 4,000 keywords. This would take me forever to go into, but all I would have to do is like maybe throw in a couple of filters here. Like maybe, hey, show me keywords that are at least 400 search volume, for example, right?

Bradley Sutton:

And then if you start scanning here, I’m pretty sure you’re gonna come up with some keywords that maybe you didn’t find in Cerebro. And some of these might be maybe not for your product. Like if I had a coffin shelf. Some of these might not be relevant, but others could be loosely relevant and you might wanna get index for it if nothing else, at least to show up for more products in your sponsored ads. Like for example, I entered in gothic decor. Look at this one. Weird candles. That’s actually a interesting potential product line extension. If I was in the gothic, if I was in the gothic category, I haven’t even sorted anything here, and I’m already coming up with other interesting keywords that could be along the lines of gothic decor.

Bradley Sutton:

We’ve got Raven Decor, Baroque decor came up as a keyword here. Look at this one. Taxidermy butterfly. Yeah, I guess that could qualify as gothic decor. We’ve got cool random things. So there’s a thousand people searching for that keyword. I probably never would have found that keyword and put it in my listing, but hey, who knows? I might be relevant to at least 1, 2, 3 customers a month for that keyword, who might buy the product and just think it you got 50 of those in your listing, it’s another 50 orders for you. So don’t sleep on some of these loosely related keywords. Strategy number two today is how to get top level information on a group of keywords. All right, so like, let’s say I was searching in Cerebro, let’s say I was searching in Brand Analytics inside of Helium 10.

Bradley Sutton:

Let’s say I’m using Google Trends, Pinterest, whatever. I just compiled this list of maybe 10 random keywords that are in different departments. Well, what you can actually do in Magnet is you can actually enter in multiple keywords at once. So for example, right here I entered in coffin shelf gothic decor within egg tray, collagen peptides, garlic press, completely unrelated keywords. This is in the analyzed keywords. So there’s two tabs in Magnet, and everybody uses the first tab. I’d say like 95% of people, 95% of you don’t even realize the second tab even exists. So analyzed keywords is for entering up to 200 different keywords at the same time. And this is not forgetting like keyword extensions or more ideas. This is just for those entered keywords that I put in. What are the top level information? Like let’s say, hey, I wanted to find out what’s the Brand Analytics information for these keywords?

Bradley Sutton:

That’s, that’s what’s gonna come up here. Maybe I want to know what is the search volume? What’s the search volume trend. What’s the title density of this keywords? So if without having it going and searching for relevant or similar related keywords, this just gives me the top level information for any keywords. They don’t even have to be related to each other. So that’s strategy number two. When would you use that? You might just come up with a random idea of a keyword and you’re wondering, Hey, I wonder what’s the search volume on this? Or maybe you’re, you’ve been doing researching, like, these are some random 30 keywords that I came up with on ideas, and I’m just curious, what is the search volume on Amazon for them? You would just paste them all in here, and you’d get that within like five seconds.

Bradley Sutton:

All right, strategy number three, how to find the most common root words with a list of keywords. So let’s say I have been doing keyword research in Cerebro or again, somewhere else, or I pull out the top keywords from my competitor’s product, and I’m just wondering, Hey, what are the common root words? Like is the word coffin in it a lot? It’s the word gothic. All right, so that I know it can kind of sometimes give me an idea of the niche and also tell me which keywords are important. So, like I said, in that same analysis tool, what you’re gonna do is you can paste, like I said, up to 200 keywords. So here I did 150 keywords. I’m gonna go ahead and click analyze keywords. So I just pasted this whole list. It took me only two seconds to come up here.

Bradley Sutton:

And yes, it’s giving me all the kind of like information on these keywords, but what I’m looking at is the Word Frequency. This is a widget that shows up on the top right whenever you enter in searches in Magnet. And what this is showing me is the frequency of the different root words. So out of all these 150 phrases, the word decor showed up in 55 of them. The word shelf showed up in 25. The third highest root word was gothic with 21 coffin with 16. So now all of a sudden, I have a little bit better picture of this group of keywords that whatever is the way that you found it. Like I said, maybe it was, are your competitors, maybe it’s a list of all of the search terms that you’ve converted for in PPC. And then you’re like, Hey, what is the root word?

Bradley Sutton:

So maybe I can make some Broad Campaigns based on. There’s so many different ways that you could use this information, but again, this is probably something that most of you didn’t realize. How would you do that normally, right? You take 150 keywords. I mean, sure, you can maybe spot, oh yeah, I see coffin a few times, but you don’t really know unless you’re counting one by one. So this is just a super easy way in order to get some information about a group of keywords. The next one is how to find a long tail keywords that share a certain root. Long tail keywords that share a certain root. All right, let me kind of explain this. So I’m gonna head back here into Magnet, and let me enter a keyword, for example.

Bradley Sutton:

Let’s just go with coffin. So I’m gonna start with coffin, and I just want to find long tail keywords that start or that share this root. So I’m gonna go ahead and run a new search for coffin. And what I’m going to select here is I want every keyword that actually starts with or contains coffin. So I’m going to go right here into this phrases containing, and I’m gonna type in coffin. And that is gonna filter down this list of 6,000 keywords and how many keywords have coffin. Wow, 2400 keywords Helium 10 found that have the word coffin in it. And then from here, I can just go ahead and I can sort it by search volume, and I’ll be like, okay, what’s the keyword on Amazon with the word coffin in it that is searched the most?

Bradley Sutton:

Coffin nail tips. Not sure what that is. I think it’s like a beauty supply product. All right, look at the number three, press on nails coffin. So obviously coffin is kind of a, a hot thing in the nails category. And then I can just continue on here, and I’ll probably find something I didn’t even think about here. Coffin backpack. What the heck is a coffin backpack? I have no idea that showed up here. The other thing I can start filtering out, like, Hey, what are all of the keywords that have coffin in it that have at least 300 searches? And let’s just say a Title Density smaller than four. Title Density means how many listings on page one have that in the title? Now that, that filter that I just mentioned takes that list of 2,500, and now look at this, it brings it down to only 76 keywords.

Bradley Sutton:

All right, now I’m getting to the nitty gritty. Here we go. Here’s an interesting one. Coffin zen garden, coffin, jewelry box, coffin, shelf large. I actually have a product that has that’s a coffin shelf large. But anyways, this is just a great way to find out how many keywords on Amazon have some kind of search volume where it shares a root keyword. Next strategy, how to find keywords that would potentially come up in a Phrase or Broad PPC Campaign. Alright, Phrase or Broad PPC Campaign. So let’s just say that I’ve got a keyword. What do you think we should do? We’ve been doing a lot of gothic stuff, so let’s just say coffin decor, right? And so I’m just curious, is it worth it to make a Broad or Phrase Campaign like how many possible combinations could come up in a Phrase Campaign or potentially some of them from a Broad Campaign?

Bradley Sutton:

So what I’m gonna do is I’m gonna go back into Magnet, and let’s just go ahead and enter coffin decor. Now, if I just enter coffin decor all the related keywords potentially relatable keywords, so coffin decor are gonna show up, but how I can find the ones that would show up in a PPC campaign for Phrase? I am going to select the match type of smart complete. And then I’m gonna apply the filters. And this takes my list of 4,000 keywords. And this probably put it to really low look at this, 26 keywords. Now this is what’s super cool. These are not 26 keywords that start with coffin decor or that end in coffin decor. It’s all of these keywords that have the two words, coffin and decor and potentially plural forms of this keyword in the phrase.

Bradley Sutton:

For example, look at this. We’ve got coffin shaped decor. Look at that, Magnet here. Even split the word up with shaped inside of it. But it recognizes that coffin and decor in there. If you were targeting coffin decor, a broad or phrase match potentially phrase match campaign would potentially show it, not in all cases. Other keywords in there was like coffin decoration, Coffin, home decor spooky coffin decor. There’s a lot of keywords that are showing up. These will all show up in like a PPC, and they’re kind of like longer tail versions of the, the keyword that I had entered in, which was coffin decor. By the way, this is number now, number six, maybe I’ve done a keyword research in Magnet for, again, the word coffin decor. And I’m just wondering for all the related keywords to coffin decor, which of the keywords that are most trending over the last 30 days?

Bradley Sutton:

Super simple to do. This just takes a couple of clicks. I would go in here to Magnet, and then once I get the search results, I am going to sort in descending order by search volume trend. So this is basically taking this week’s search volume and comparing it to one month ago. So for example, this keyword here, black glass box, I don’t even know what the heck that is, is up 800% over last month. Large zengarden is up 141% from last month. Spooky stuff is up 100%. So whatever search you have done inside of Magnet, just find that search volume, trend button, sort it in descending order, and you’re gonna see what are the keywords that have increased the most in search volume from this week or today compared to this time last month. It just takes this week’s search volume subtracts, last week’s search volume, and then sorts it kind of indc descending order without you having to look at the historical search volume and do different calculations.

Bradley Sutton:

By the way, speaking of search volume here, here’s another thing you can do. This is not even one of the strategies on my list. It’s kinda like a bonus strategy, but look at Walmart and Google Analytics search volume right here within Magnet. And the way you do that, anywhere where you see search volume, just click the button. Like, here’s a keyword, plastic cauldron. I don’t even know what that word means. You hit this search volume button, and the one that shows up here is the history of the search volume. So I can see this is obviously a huge product around Halloween time, whatever the heck this means. And then the rest of the year, the search volume’s around like 1000. But if I wanted to see what it is on Walmart, I would hit this dropdown and I would hit the Walmart, and I could see, again, it’s very high around the same time on Walmart and the rest of the year pretty low.

Bradley Sutton:

If I want to see Google Trends, what is the kind of like history here, very similar except on Google, it actually starts trending in, looks like even in August. And then the rest of the year it’s kind of dead. So of course, Helium 10 is primarily for selling on Amazon, but don’t forget you can get some information about Walmart and some Google information as well, right within Magnet. Next strategy we’re gonna be going over today is how to see the keywords in a niche where no one product is dominating sales. No one product. So let’s just stay here in this coffin results here. And I am going to be going over this first two columns. And this is only if you have like a diamond or scale your business plan.

Bradley Sutton:

You are gonna see Brand Analytics, total click share, and total conversion share. So what I would like to do is I wanna see the ones that have the total conversion share, the top three totally, maybe a minimum of like 1%, but a maximum of like 15%. And what that is going to show me is it’s adding up the total conversions, the total sales of the top three click products. And if I were to add them up, there totally are less than 15% of all of the sales for the keyword. What is that? I hope you guys can understand this and picture this. Why would that be important? Well, I mean, I could actually go for the, the opposite, but why I like looking for this is I’m thinking like, Hey, the top three click products are only getting 15% at most of the sales.

Bradley Sutton:

That means 85% of the sales are wide open for other people on that page. Potentially somebody might consider that as kind of like lower hanging fruit, You could actually go the opposite. Maybe you wanna find a keyword where one product or the top three products are dominating like 90% of the sales. And if you think that when you find those three products, which you can also do here in Magnet, that they’re not doing something that’s really looks good, like they’ve got some garbage listings and crap keywords and stuff like that, well, maybe you’re gonna be like, oh, man, this is like taking candy from a baby. I’m gonna be able to steal these sales because these guys who are just crushing this market don’t even know how to put together a listing. So you can like, look at it both ways.

Bradley Sutton:

There’s not like a right or wrong way, but in this case, what I did was, I did a minimum 1%, a maximum of 15%, and then look at some of these keywords that have come up. For example, a lot of these are kind of generic keywords, and it kind of makes sense goth accessories, if I were to add up the top three it’s only 14% of the sales that they make up. And I can actually see what those three products are looks like here. Once I click on the Brand Analytics graph, I can see that as of last month, the top three for this niche was a black gothic vintage ring set. It had 11% of the conversions. This was last month, by the way, not this last week. Like, like the Magna was showing me, and the number two was only a 4% a punk waist belt chain, whatever the heck this ugly thing is that only had 4%.

Bradley Sutton:

So then just based on this information, now all of a sudden I’m like, Hey, it’s wide open, the sales here. Like, I just gotta find what people are looking for and hopefully I can capture the largest part of sales for that keyword. So this is coming directly from Brand Analytics. You can actually do this on your own without helium 10, but it’s just kind of a little bit hard because you’d have to download 1 million lines of information, make like a pivot table, and do some formulas to add up the percentages and stuff. But if you have Helium 10, then obviously it’s much better to it here where I can just enter in a couple of filters. All right, the next strategy I want to go over right now is how to find common root words in an overall keyword niche.

Bradley Sutton:

So like, if I did one of those massive searches, like here I did the coffin search, right? And I’m just going to go and I just want to see what are the most common keywords in here other than coffin that are coffin related or coffin decor related keywords. And again, the same place that I talked about earlier, that you look under the analyze tab, even under the fine suggestion tab, it’s the same place I’m going to go to word frequency. Super simple. I don’t even have to click anything. As soon as I get into any niche of keywords, all I have to do is look at this word frequency to see what are the most common root words here. And I can see right here for this market, it’s coffin, it’s decor, it’s Halloween, and then again, you’ll find stuff that kind of like surprise you.

Bradley Sutton:

I’m like, what the heck is this board? It says, board, B O A R D is the number three out of all these keywords, 312 of them have boards. So watch this. If I’m just curious what the heck keywords with board are coming up, I just click the word board. And what’s gonna happen is, it is automatically gonna filter this whole list of keywords, and it’s going to show me all of the keywords that have the word, word board in it. And now it kind of makes a little bit more sense. I see black coffin letter board, I see letter board with stand, I see giant letter board. So probably what’s happening is there’s a number of products that are doing well for coffin decor that are actually coffin letter boards. And so they’re also ranking for all of these board related keywords.

Bradley Sutton:

But again, I didn’t know that two minutes ago, just by looking at that root word frequency. Now I got some extra insights into this niche. The last thing I’m gonna talk about today is finding sub niches by searching for root niche phrases. Now this can be wide open, and you could just literally do this all day long. And this is more of product research using one of our Keyword Research tools. So for example, maybe you’ve noticed that sometimes in some of your products, there’s a span, a lot of Spanish keywords that come up, and one of them in a lot of supplements or, or regardless of what kind of products in clothes, one of the root phrases that might, you might see often in Spanish keywords that show up in Amazon USA is “para mujeres.”

Bradley Sutton:

That means for women, I mean, you see that in, in English, right? Like gifts for women, this for women, that for women, whatever, for women, right? But if you wanna go a little bit more niche, like what are people searching for para mujeres, all right, watch this. I’m going to hop into Magnet and I’m going to type in para mujeres. And then I’m going to hit and get keywords. Let’s go ahead and run a brand new search. Somebody in my account had searched for para mujeres already, so maybe somebody has found this. Now what I’m going to do is I’m going to say, show me all of the phrases containing para mujeres. This is similar to another strategy that I told you about. And let’s see what we have coming up here. 467 keywords that have para mujeres in them.

Bradley Sutton:

This is just one example. We’re gonna do another example. The number one keyword guys, and this should not be slept on. This is a Spanish keyword that has 8,000 search volume, 8,000 search volume vitaminas para mujeres. So vitamins there’s some keywords that I can’t really mention on the air here. Here’s another one. Oh my goodness, you guys watching on YouTube might get a kick some of these 10 tennis para mujeres with platform. I love that. That is a Spanglish keyword. So tennis I’m assuming it means like tennis shoes, for women. And then it says, with platform, it’s like, it has Spanglish in it. Here we go, perfumes para mujer.

Bradley Sutton:

That’s a cart is like  I think like a wallet, right? That like a agenda, like, like a notebook or diary, or not diary, like a planner, right? Isn’t that what that means? I don’t know. But anyways, all of these keywords are, I gotta get off this page cuz there’s, there’s some kind of PG 13 keywords on this, which is Helium 10 doesn’t filter these out, but that’s one of them. Like, let’s say that you are in a niche where you deal with a specific kind of let’s just say material, right? And you want to know what are people searching for in this material? Like let’s say you make bamboo products, So I’m gonna go into here and I’m going to type in bamboo. Cuz I know my factory can produce bamboo products and I have no idea what bamboo product I want to come out with, but I want to go with what the demand is.

Bradley Sutton:

So what are people searching for that have the word bamboo in it? Same thing. I enter bamboo for the search. I go into phrases containing, I type bamboo and I hit apply filters. And then maybe I want to know I bet you this number’s gonna be high. Let’s take a look here. Yeah, 6,000 keywords start with bamboo. So the next thing I wanna find out is like, you know what? I wanna know the keywords that not many people have in their title. So I’m gonna put a max title density of three, and let’s just say minimum search volume of 1000. Let’s go ahead and apply the filters. And this takes that list of 6,000 bamboo keywords that have bamboo in it down to 69. Now I’m going to sort by descending order the search volume and let me just read out to you guys listening, what are some of these keywords that have come up?

Bradley Sutton:

Bamboo brush. What the heck is that? I’m actually gonna look at that. Bamboo brush. Oh, it’s like a, like a hairbrush that’s made out of bamboo. Okay, I see what that is. All right, so the crazy thing about it is it would seem saturated, right? But guess what? It’s gonna be easy. If I wanted to make this product, it wouldn’t be that hard to get on page one. Why? Because the title density is only three out of 50 listings on page one. Only three people actually have the word bamboo brush in it. What are some other keywords here that showed up? Bamboo cooking utensils, bamboo plants live bamboo organizer, bamboo socks men’s I love bamboo socks, by the way. Bamboo hairbrush for hair growth. What? So if you’re losing your hair and you use a bamboo hairbrush, it’s gonna help you grow your hair back, or I gotta keep that in mind.

Bradley Sutton:

That’s interesting for the future use right there. Bamboo sleep sack, bamboo utensil organizer, some of these guys like could be actual product ideas. And all I did was I entered in one keyword bamboo because like I know I can make bamboo. And then I entered a minimum search volume. I entered in title density, and now I’m coming up with product ideas that a few minutes ago, I didn’t even know existed. I’m just looking up some of these, these are, are kind of like fascinating. So many different bamboo combs and bamboo brush keywords. Here’s another one. Glasses with bamboo lids and straw. The list goes on and on. I almost could just make an episode about this bamboo niche and what product we should, we should launch, but this was all from me just entering one keyword into Magnet.

Bradley Sutton:

All right, so guys, Magnet is one of our most OG tools here at Helium 10. You guys need to be using it. Now, the other OG tool that we have is Keyword Tracker. So let’s just do six strategies with Keyword Tracker. Strategy number one, and again, this is almost any tool out there has some kind of Keyword Tracker. And so like if you guys for some strange reason are not using Helium 10, use whatever you tool that you have in order to do the strategies I’m about to talk about. Simple one. Let’s just keep it basic. For those of you who brand new strategy, number one, how to track your keywords, your organic ranks, both now and historically, all you have to do guys, is enter in your product and just enter a keyword. And then now the amazing thing is, is you might think that and actually that’s the way it is with most Keyword Trackers, it’s only gonna show me the ranks as of today, no, I’m showing you guys right now on the screen, my coffin shelf.

Bradley Sutton:

I’ve of course been tracking coffin shelf for like two years, but if I had just entered the word coffin shelf into Helium 10, it’s actually going to go ahead and show me the ranks since Helium 10 has been tracking that keyword. Going back maybe one year, potentially going back even two years, it’s going to show me where I have been ranking for coffin shelf. So that is super important. Real quick and simple, whether you’re selling on Walmart, whether you’re selling on Amazon, get your product in there, get your keyword in there and instantly you’re going to get once every 24 hours going forward and going backwards, what you were ranking at organically, same thing. How to track your sponsored ranks, both now and historically, it’s the same exact thing. Once you enter that in, guys, there is this other graph that people sleep on.

Bradley Sutton:

I was showing you the organic rank over here on the right hand side, all the way on the right hand side, there’s the sponsored rank. So then now I can see, hey, where am I showing up in sponsored rank for this keyword or this product? So this is something really important to be able to track. Your sponsored rank, that’s actually something that you have a little bit more control over as far as where you show up based on maybe like what you’re bidding in PPC, right? Your organic rank. It’s hard to just like change that the right away, but hopefully you can understand how tracking both organic and sponsored can help you because you’re gonna want to take actions at least on the sponsored rank to get back to the top of the page on some of them.

Bradley Sutton:

And so it’s important to know when you fall off the top of the page. Now, one thing I mentioned is that I can look back historically at either of these numbers, so it’s important to understand how to do that. Once I click into one of these graphs. By default, it’s only showing me like the last 30 days, but I like clicking one year or even all time based on how much information Helium 10 has. And I can see what this product has been doing over the last couple of years. So I could see maybe correlate what’s been going on with my sales compared to my keyword ranks. And this is actually a strategy in itself. Take a look at your sales graphs, your BSR charts, whatever historical information you have, and then look at your peaks and valleys of sales, and then try and correlate that with the peaks and valleys of your keyword ranks for different keywords.

Bradley Sutton:

And then you’re gonna be able to see which keyword ranks really affected your sales and some maybe you think are affecting your sales and art. So like for example, if you on average in a one month were always selling 10 units a day, right? But then all of a sudden the next month you jumped up to 20 units a day and maybe you weren’t doing anything more in sponsored ads or you weren’t sending outside traffic. Well, what that means is you must be converting more for more keywords. That’s probably one of the sources of your increased sales. And you don’t know necessarily which keywords are the ones that you’re getting more impressions for, right? All you gotta do is look at the top keywords that you were tracking and then compare last month with this month. Hey, where did I increase? Where did I stay the same?

Bradley Sutton:

And the ones that increased, Hey, you’re probably getting more sales for there because that’s what makes you increase in rank is getting more sales. Conversely, if your sales start going down, well look at your Keyword Tracker and find what keywords that you lose rank where did you fall off of page one, and then do what you can to try and get that rank back. Strategy number three out of six here is how to track your relative rank between you and your competitor. So sometimes relative rank is almost as important, or even in some cases more important than where your organic rank is. Because I want you to think about this. Let’s just say coffin shelf is the keyword word, right? If you were typing in coffin shelf and you were searching for an exact coffin shelf, right? A small coffin shelf, well, you as a buyer you’re not looking at the bat shelfs or the spider shelves or the coffin letter boards or the other products that are showing up on those first results.

Bradley Sutton:

Those are almost like invisible to you. So let’s say page one, position one is a makeup coffin shelf. It’s almost as if page one, position one doesn’t exist to you as a buyer, because that’s not what you’re looking for. The very first small coffin shelf that shows up on that page for this customer, that’s like page one, position one in their mind. Does that make sense guys? It’s important that you understand this concept, right? So not everybody on page one is your competitor. I’ve used the example of according, it’s a little bit easier to understand than the coffin shelf niche, right? You type in accordion on Amazon, there’s professional $600 accordions and there’s $20 kids accordions. They are not competitors of each other. So let’s go ahead and search that on Amazon.

Bradley Sutton:

I wanna show that to you guys. So I’m gonna go ahead and type in Amazon here, accordion, there we go. Accordion. I hope I spelled that right. So let’s just say I am looking for a professional accordion, right? I mean the mariachi band or whatever, right? Page one, position one for me is this one, which actually happens to be page one, position one, but what’s page one, position two. In other words, what’s the second product I would consider on this search results? It’s not this second or third one that’s showing up here. These are $30 kids, accordions. I would never in a million years buy a kids accordion if I’m in a mariachi band and I need to replace one. No. So the second one on this page is this one, right? That I see as a buyer. So it’s important to understand relative rank sometimes is even more important than your organic rank.

Bradley Sutton:

If there’s a lot of different kinds of products on the page, you wanna have from your direct competitors relative rank of number one, meaning that you are the first product on that page from your main competitors that you know you’re competing with the sale. So how do you do that inside of Keyword Tracker? Well, the first thing you’re gonna have to do is you just add your competitors. You can add up to five. And so I would say add your main competitors. And then what’s gonna happen is you look here at this relative rank, like I put in just one competitor here. And on this my main keyword, I am two out of two. That means I am not first, I am not the first one. If I want, if I’m curious about where I am ranked now, if I’m tracking my competitor, I can actually see over time where I have ranked compared to where my competitor has ranked.

Bradley Sutton:

And look at this, my competitor’s crushing it. They’re always page one, position one, and I’m like, languishing around position 14 and 13 and, and things like that. So this is an important metric to be able to track your relative rank. Now, how to keep track of your keyword experiments and campaigns. What I do a lot is I run experiments, like maybe I’m going to go ahead and change my title, or maybe I’m doing a campaign, a Google campaign where I’m targeting a certain keyword. I’m, I’m hoping that by running Google ads with keyword that it might help my ranking or whatever the case is, maybe I’m going to increase my PPC spend. Maybe I’m adding keywords to my search terms. Well, if you start doing these experiments, what I want you guys to do is on the keyword that you did the experiment right here, there’s a button that says add a note.

Bradley Sutton:

So for example, let’s take a look at goth stuff. Look at this. I put a note here on January 26th. I was not indexed for stuff nor goth stuff. And so I added it to subject matter, and then I confirmed it worked, and now I was indexed as of 126. And so now I can search my Keyword Tracker history to see what did that do with my my keyword ranking, By getting index for that did I maintain ranking? So I don’t even remember doing that. I know I’m the one who had to, I’ve done that, but I literally do not remember doing that. That was only three months ago. So maybe your memory’s better than me, but are you gonna remember what you did last year? So if you’re looking at historical information and you’re wondering, Hey, well where did this peak or go, oh, maybe it was because I was doing a campaign, you’ll be able to now go back and look at your notes for the Keyword Tracker to see if you were doing a certain campaign at the time.

Bradley Sutton:

Now, another important thing, super, super unique feature of Keyword Tracker is the boost. So depending on the different plan you have, you have up to a certain number of boosts. And what boost is this rocket ship that you see on the left hand side of any keywords, and I highly recommend turning it on for your main keywords every 10 days. And the difference is when you do that, now we are checking your ranks every hour of the day, 24 hours a day, instead of like, for example, just once a day. So you can see right here the difference of what I was just having Keyword Tracker on just checking once a day as opposed to when I was checking every 24 times a day. There’s so many different, more data points here and so much more movement on the keywords.

Bradley Sutton:

Now you might be wondering why is it different? You’re like, people say that all the time. Like, Hey, I saw Keyword Tracker and my rank is different. It Keyword Tracker is wrong. Keyword Tracker is never wrong. First of all, because it is showing a real rank somewhere. Is it showing the rank of your exact computer? No, we’re not using your computer to check the rank. we have our own ways to check rank, right? But we are checking different addresses, different browsing scenarios. Like do you know that if you were in incognito mode in the Chrome browser compared to the Amazon mobile app, right? You could see two different ranks, even if you’re in the same house and have the same address. If you are in New York, potentially you could have a different rank for the same keyword and same product as somebody searching at the very same time in Boise, Idaho or something, right?

Bradley Sutton:

Some people say, oh, it’s by zip code. It’s not even by zip code guys, potentially, you could have different ranks, it’s not gonna vary by much, but I’ve seen different ranks within different addresses in the same zip code. Like I entered one time the Helium 10 office, and then I entered in an address like two blocks away, different ranks. One was like 16, almost like 14. So there’s nothing, there’s no value in trying to check every single potential address out there. But what’s important to have is a general idea of what’s going on with your rank. And the best way to do that is by having boost on so that Helium 10 is randomizing 24 times a day, different browsing scenarios, different addresses on checking where your product is showing up. And what you wanna see is you wanna look for these big, huge changes.

Bradley Sutton:

And we call that the Amazon search shuffle. So if you ever see a Keyword Tracker graph where you have boost on, and you see these crazy up and down, like one hour, it’s ten one hour, it’s 100 back to nine, then it’s back to 87. That’s what we call the Amazon search shuffle, where sometimes based on different browsing scenarios, Amazon is kind of showing you all over the place. There’s nothing you can really do to “fix that”. You just gotta kind of wait, wait it out, and then Amazon usually stabilizes after a couple days. But then instead of having low sales and you wondering what’s going on, why is my impressions down? Why are my sales down? If you had boost on a Keyword Tracker five times out of a 10, that’s one of the main reasons on why your sales might be down, is because your ranks are not consistent across the whole marketplace that you’re in.

Bradley Sutton:

The last strategy here I wanna talk about is how to cross-check Search Query Performance with Keyword Tracker. So for example, Search Query Performance is something that you only have if you have Brand Analytics. So let’s go right here into Search Query Performance. And I’m looking at my exact coffin shelf, And I’m looking at the weekly one, the Search Query Volume is one of the ways that Amazon measures people who type this into the search, right? But it also includes people who like clicked back on their browser, they refreshed it, they came back, et cetera, et cetera. There’s like a lot of things that go into this metric. This is normalized search query volume. We, we had an episode where we went all into this, all right, so I’m not gonna go too much detail, but basically if I see, for example, this keyword here, coffin shelf has 3,500 search query volume, and then my impressions is 4,000, well, that means that not only I’m showing up more than one time every time somebody searches.

Bradley Sutton:

And the way I can correlate that with Keyword Tracker is okay, I must be showing up for both organic on page one and sponsored on page one. So if I click here in my sponsored rank history, I can see that, yeah, a lot of the time I’m on page one. So that makes sense. I’m getting more than one impression for every search because I’m showing up multiple times on page one. So another way to look at this is like, take a look at this keyword here. Goth Shelf. I had almost 600 search query volume or not I had, but Amazon had 600 people who typed this in or who click refresh on their browser or whatever, but I only had 215 impressions. So maybe I’m wondering like why am I not showing up every single time that somebody is entering this search?

Bradley Sutton:

Well, you know what? Let’s go to Keyword Tracker. And if I was searching, or if I was tracking gothic shelf, sure enough, sure I was, let’s go ahead and look at my history of my organic rank and take a look at this. A lot of the times I am not on page one, it is on page two, so it makes sense. Let’s take a look at my sponsored rank. Am I even showing up in sponsored rank here? Look at this a lot. Most of the time I am not on page one. And a lot of what the search queries are showing you in Search Query Performance is page one and page two views. So now there’s a way where I’m like, okay, hey goth shelf, I think this is a valuable keyword. I’m looking at Search Query Performance, my performance is gonna look good.

Bradley Sutton:

Now I look at Keyword Tracker and I’m like, okay, my organic rank is not great. My sponsored rank is even worse. Now I know maybe I want to put some money into my sponsored ad for this keyword so I can increase my sponsored rank, and then hopefully if I get some conversions, my organic rank will increase. How did that even come to that conclusion? Well, I was looking in Brand Analytics first. I married it with Helium 10 data, and now I was able to make an educated decision that hopefully is gonna bring me money. And at the end of the day, guys, that’s what it’s all about, right? We’re, we’re trying to make more money on Amazon, we’re trying to make more money on Walmart. So these are like I didn’t count, I think like 13 or 14 different strategies that we can do all related to keywords.

Bradley Sutton:

And some of it I hope was new to you guys. We learned a lot in Magnet. We learned a lot in Keyword Tracker. Whatever level of Helium 10 you have, you have full access to both of these tools. So I highly recommend getting in there into Magnet and Keyword Tracker, making sure you guys are tracking your keywords, making sure you guys are doing supplemental research in Magnet maybe for your existing products, maybe for new products, maybe to get new ideas. But the important thing is, so I want you guys to put into practice everything you learned today and then let me know in the comments below in like a week or a few days or something, what cool stuff that you were able to find because you put into practice one of these strategies. Hope you guys enjoy this. I’ll see you in the next episode.


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Want to absolutely start crushing it on Amazon? Here are few carefully curated resources to get you started: 

  • Freedom Ticket: Taught by Amazon thought leader Kevin King, get A-Z Amazon strategies and techniques for establishing and solidifying your business. 
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  • SellerTrademarks.com: Trademarks are vital for protecting your Amazon brand from hijackers, and sellertrademarks.com provides a streamlined process for helping you get one.
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