How to Find the Right Keywords for Your Local Business (Without Overcomplicating It)
How to Find the Right Keywords for Your Local Business (Without Overcomplicating It)
Most small business owners hear "keyword research" and immediately zone out. It sounds like something that requires expensive tools, spreadsheets, and a marketing degree.
It doesn't. And if you skip it, you're basically guessing what people are searching for — and hoping your website shows up anyway.
Here's a straightforward approach to finding the keywords that actually matter for your local business.
What Keywords Really Are
Keywords are just the words and phrases people type into Google when they're looking for something. That's it.
If someone in Clearwater searches "roof repair near me" and you're a roofer in Clearwater, that's a keyword you want to show up for. The goal is figuring out which searches your potential customers are actually making — and then making sure your website speaks that language.
Start With What You Already Know
Before you touch any tool, write down a list of:
- What you do. Every service, every specialty. "Residential painting," "kitchen remodel," "AC maintenance" — whatever it is.
- Where you do it. Every city, neighborhood, and area you serve. Clearwater, Dunedin, Palm Harbor, Tarpon Springs, New Port Richey — all of them.
- What your customers ask you. Think about the questions that come up in phone calls, emails, and consultations. "How much does a new roof cost?" or "Do I need a permit for a fence?" — those are keywords too.
Combine these into phrases: "AC repair Clearwater," "fence installation Palm Harbor," "how much does a kitchen remodel cost in Pinellas County." Those are your starting keywords.
Use Google Itself as a Research Tool
Google gives you keyword ideas for free. Here's how:
Autocomplete: Start typing a search and look at what Google suggests. Type "plumber in" and it'll show you "plumber in Largo," "plumber in Dunedin," "plumber in St. Pete" — those are all terms real people are searching. People Also Ask: Search for one of your services and scroll down to the "People Also Ask" box. These are questions people frequently search for. Each one is a potential blog post or FAQ entry. Related Searches: At the bottom of the search results page, Google shows related searches. These are gold for finding variations you might not have thought of.Think Local, Not National
This is where a lot of small businesses go wrong. They try to rank for broad terms like "best web design" or "plumbing services" and wonder why nothing happens.
You're not competing nationally. You're competing in your market. That means your keywords should almost always include a location:
- ✅ "web design Pinellas County"
- ✅ "emergency plumber Clearwater"
- ✅ "family dentist Palm Harbor"
- ❌ "best web design" (you'll never outrank national companies)
- ❌ "plumbing tips" (too broad, wrong intent)
Location-specific keywords have less competition and higher intent. Someone searching "HVAC repair New Port Richey" is looking for a service provider right now — not browsing.
Understand Search Intent
Not every keyword is worth targeting. You need to think about what the person searching actually wants:
- "AC repair near me" → They need a service provider. High intent. Great keyword.
- "How does central air work" → They're learning. Low intent. Might be useful for a blog post, but it won't drive leads directly.
- "Carrier vs Trane AC units" → They're comparing products. Medium intent. Could be worth a comparison page.
Focus most of your effort on keywords where the searcher is ready to take action — call, book, visit, or buy.
Where to Put Your Keywords
Finding the right keywords only matters if you actually use them. Here's where they belong:
- Page titles and headings. Your homepage, service pages, and location pages should all include your primary keywords naturally.
- Meta descriptions. These show up in search results. Include your keyword and location.
- URL slugs. `/ac-repair-clearwater` beats `/services-page-3` every time.
- Body content. Write naturally, but make sure the terms you're targeting actually appear on the page. Google can't rank you for something you never mention.
- Image alt text. Describe what's in the image using relevant terms.
Don't stuff keywords everywhere — Google penalizes that. Write for humans first, search engines second.
You Don't Need Expensive Tools
Free tools that work great for local keyword research:
- Google Search Console shows you what keywords your site already ranks for. Start here.
- Google Business Profile Insights tells you what searches led people to your listing.
- AnswerThePublic generates question-based keywords from any seed term.
- Google Trends shows whether interest in a keyword is rising or falling in your area.
Paid tools like Ahrefs or SEMrush are powerful, but most local businesses can get 80% of the value from free sources.
The Bottom Line
Keyword research isn't complicated. It's really just understanding what your customers are searching for and making sure your website answers those searches.
Start with what you know. Use Google's free suggestions. Think local. Focus on intent. Put the right words in the right places.
Do that consistently, and you'll start showing up where it matters.
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Need help figuring out which keywords your business should target? On Point helps local businesses in Pinellas and Pasco County build websites and SEO strategies that actually bring in customers. Get in touch — we'll point you in the right direction.Ready to grow your business online?
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