I stopped chasing keywords and traffic went up. why?

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been paying more attention to search intent than keyword volume.
A few months ago I had pages targeting with decent search volume but rankings and clicks were disappointing. When I looked closer then I realized my content was not matching what users actually wanted.
For eg some keywords looked informational but the top results were mostly product comparisons or buying guides.
Since focusing more on intent and less on keywords metrics, engagement has improved and some pages started ranking faster.
Curious how everyone here handles search intent research.
Do you manually analyze the SERPs or use a specific process/tool before creating content?
 
been paying more attention to search intent than keyword volume.
A few months ago I had pages targeting with decent search volume but rankings and clicks were disappointing. When I looked closer then I realized my content was not matching what users actually wanted.
For eg some keywords looked informational but the top results were mostly product comparisons or buying guides.
Since focusing more on intent and less on keywords metrics, engagement has improved and some pages started ranking faster.
Curious how everyone here handles search intent research.
Do you manually analyze the SERPs or use a specific process/tool before creating content?
Manual SERP analysis is definitely the best approach. I always look at the top five results in incognito mode to see if Google favors listicles, product pages, or deep guides. Tools are great for finding the keywords, but nothing beats actually checking what is currently ranking to nail the exact user intent.
 
I think you are right. You stopped focusing on too many keywords and matched the user intent better and in many cases this works much stronger.
In 2026 Google looks less at just a set of keywords and more at expertise and how accurately the page answers the user’s question. But still, 2–3 main keywords should be present on the page, preferably in the title or H1 too, then ranking growth can be faster.
I look at intent like a shop shelf, not like a keyword list. If Google shows comparisons and prices, then writing a long informational article is like putting a textbook on a shelf where people came to choose a product.
 
agree with this. i have seen the same thing that targeting keywords alone does not work if the content does not match user intent. checking the SERP before creating content has helped me understand what users actually want.
 
same thing happened to me when i stopped chasing volume and just copied what already ranks on serps

i just check top 5 pages and follow the format they use
tools help but serps tell you most of it if you look close
 
i had similar results. a keyword can have good volume but if the content does not match what users expect then rankings often struggle. these day is spend more time looking at the top results than the keyword metrics themselves.
 
been paying more attention to search intent than keyword volume.
A few months ago I had pages targeting with decent search volume but rankings and clicks were disappointing. When I looked closer then I realized my content was not matching what users actually wanted.
For eg some keywords looked informational but the top results were mostly product comparisons or buying guides.
Since focusing more on intent and less on keywords metrics, engagement has improved and some pages started ranking faster.
Curious how everyone here handles search intent research.
Do you manually analyze the SERPs or use a specific process/tool before creating content?
Natural writing and keyword intent usually triumphs over focusing solely on keywords. first, analyze the results on the search engine page: if google rewards product comparison page, then your long article will not succeed even with backlinks.
 
same experience here. i had low volume keywords bring more traffic than higher volume ones simply because the content matched what users were actually looking for. search intent seems more important than keyword volume in a lot of cases now.
 
search intent is often the real ranking factor. a page targeting the right intent can outperform a higher volume keyword page that does not match what users are looking for.
 
what i believe is keywords are still important but they should support the content rather than controlling it.
 
been paying more attention to search intent than keyword volume.
A few months ago I had pages targeting with decent search volume but rankings and clicks were disappointing. When I looked closer then I realized my content was not matching what users actually wanted.
For eg some keywords looked informational but the top results were mostly product comparisons or buying guides.
Since focusing more on intent and less on keywords metrics, engagement has improved and some pages started ranking faster.
Curious how everyone here handles search intent research.
Do you manually analyze the SERPs or use a specific process/tool before creating content?
Ever since I started focusing on intent I've had better results. Now, before I write something , I rapid-scan the top results to see if it is informational, commercial, or transactional.
 
been paying more attention to search intent than keyword volume.
A few months ago I had pages targeting with decent search volume but rankings and clicks were disappointing. When I looked closer then I realized my content was not matching what users actually wanted.
For eg some keywords looked informational but the top results were mostly product comparisons or buying guides.
Since focusing more on intent and less on keywords metrics, engagement has improved and some pages started ranking faster.
Curious how everyone here handles search intent research.
Do you manually analyze the SERPs or use a specific process/tool before creating content?
I usually start by manually checking the SERPs. I look at what type of content is ranking first before writing anything, because tools don’t always show the real intent clearly.
 
It’s necessary to analyze manually because the tool can mistake transactional queries for informational ones. Analyze the first three live positions and check whethe Google shows tables, carousels, or Reddit posts in those positions then copy the strucure to get your page ranked there
 
I think you stopped writing for search volume and started writing for what people actually wanted. That's usually what makes the difference.
 
reading the SERP is the right instinct, but i'd push it one level past "match the format." matching what already ranks just earns you the right to compete — if all five are buying guides and you write a buying guide, you're in the game, but you haven't given google a reason to pick you. the actual leverage is spotting where the current top results DON'T fully answer the query: one's from 2022, one skips the step everyone's actually stuck on, none of them show a real example. that gap is your wedge. my quick pass on the top 5 (incognito): 1) format — what shape does google want, 2) the common ground — what every result covers = table stakes you can't skip, 3) the gap — what's missing, stale, or thin = where you actually win. then i mine "people also ask" and the autocomplete for the sub-questions, since that's the intent under the intent. one more tell: if the SERP is a mix of formats, intent is split — pick the one sub-intent you can own instead of writing a frankenstein page trying to serve all of them at once.
 
I have made the same mistake before. Now I look at the top ranking pages their format, and the questions they answer before I even think about writing the content.
 
if top results are buying guides for a keyword that looks informational that’s your answer right there regardless of what the keyword tool suggests.
 
I usually review the top search results before writing to understand what users expect Matching search intent has consistently given me better results than choosing keywords based only on search volume.
 
I Still check the SERPS manually before writing anything. Five minutes looking at the top results usually tells me more than keyword volume ever will.
 
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