What is KEI

Started by jaysh4922, 07-18-2017, 03:42:03

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jaysh4922Topic starter

KEI stand for Keyword Effectiveness Index, which measures how effective a keyword, is for your web site. It compares the number of search for a keyword with the number of search results to identify which keywords are the most effective for your campaign.


Lauren Shawn

KEI (keyword effectiveness index) is one of the quickest ways to find keywords that show potential - that is, those keywords which are likely to help your site attract more traffic.
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andrewskyler

The KEI or Keyword Effectiveness Index compares the number of searches for a particular keyword to the number of search results or competition for that keyword. It is a good measure to find which keywords to choose for a website. The higher KEI for a better keyword is choosing it for a website.

fayeseom

KEI stands for "Keyword Effectiveness Index". The KEI essentially helps point out which keywords are the most effective and valuable.

noellieaddison

The Keyword Effectiveness Index, also called KEI, is one way to predict the chances for successful high rankings. KEI is a relative factor that compares targeted keyword phrases to the number of pages competing for these phrases. The results are stack-ranked based upon the chances for success.
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RH-Calvin

KEI stands for Keyword Effectiveness Index and it is one of the quickest ways to find keywords that show potential - that is, those keywords which are likely to help your site attract more traffic. It looks a bit like this: It's a scaled metric, so you'll never see a KEI of more than 100.

damponting44

Keyword Effectiveness Index (either tool): KEI is one of the quickest ways to find keywords with good potential - that is, those keywords which are likely to help your site attract more traffic. It's a banded metric, so you'll never see a KEI of more than 100.
KEI means Keyword effectiveness index: A mathematical representation of the popularity of a keyword measured in number of searchers (demand), compared to its popularity measured as the number of pages in a search engines index (supply).