What people type into search
A keyword is the word or phrase a person types into a search engine, like “web design Winter Park.” In SEO, choosing the right keywords , by search intent and buying power, not just volume , decides which customers a page can attract.
Why it matters. Targeting the keywords your actual customers use (not vanity high-volume terms) is what makes a page bring qualified leads. Local intent keywords like “{service} near me” convert far better than broad ones.
A keyword is the word or phrase a person types into a search engine, such as “web design Winter Park.” In SEO, keywords signal what a searcher wants, so choosing them by search intent and competition lets a business create pages that match those searches, rank in results, and get cited by AI assistants.
A family dentist in Winter Park wants more new patients, so she targets the keyword “dentist in Winter Park” on her homepage and builds a separate page for “teeth whitening Winter Park.” Each keyword maps to a different searcher intent , the first person is choosing a practice, the second already knows what they want and is comparing options. By giving each intent its own page with a matching title, headings, and body copy, she shows up for both searches instead of cramming everything onto one page. Within a few months those two focused pages outrank a single generic “dental services” page that tried to do everything at once.
Keywords matter because they connect what people already type into a search box to the page you want them to land on. The wrong keyword , too broad, too competitive, or aimed at the wrong intent , means you either rank for nothing or attract visitors who never convert. A good keyword is specific enough to win and commercial enough to be worth winning, which is why local businesses usually beat national brands on long, location-specific phrases like “emergency plumber Lake Mary” rather than the single word “plumber.”
Keywords are measured with two numbers that work together: monthly search volume (how many people search the phrase) and keyword difficulty (how hard the current top results are to outrank). For a Central Florida small business, a term with 50 to 200 local searches a month and low difficulty often beats a high-volume phrase you can never crack. The most common mistake is “keyword stuffing,” repeating the phrase unnaturally; Google rewards pages that read like a human wrote them and genuinely answer the question behind the search.
Keyword strategy now feeds both local SEO and answer-engine optimization (AEO). Matching keyword intent to a city or neighborhood, like “web design Winter Park,” helps you appear in Google’s map pack and “near me” results. The same focused, question-shaped phrasing also helps AI assistants like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews pull and cite your page when someone asks for a recommendation in your area.
See how we put this to work for Central Florida businesses , and book a free consultation.
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