I use Semrush Keyword Overview as the first step when I want to find keywords for SEO with Semrush Keyword Overview. This tool gives an overall summary of a seed keyword or topic and points me straight to the deeper tools I need. I type a seed keyword like weight loss, choose the target country and device, and Semrush returns a compact dashboard with the key metrics I need to decide whether a keyword is worth pursuing.
Table of Contents
- How do I start seed keyword research with Semrush Keyword Overview?
- What does the volume number mean and why is it an estimate?
- How do I interpret keyword difficulty in Semrush?
- How can global volume and location data uncover new target markets?
- How does Semrush determine keyword intent and why does it matter?
- What does trend data tell me about seasonality and momentum?
- How do CPC, competitive density and PLA affect keyword value?
- How do keyword ideas help expand my content and SEO reach?
- What do I learn from SERP analysis in Semrush?
- How do page authority, backlinks and URL keyword counts inform my strategy?
- How do I export data and keep it up to date?
- How should I use the Keyword Overview as part of a workflow?
- FAQ
How do I start seed keyword research with Semrush Keyword Overview?
I begin by entering a single seed keyword. Semrush accepts up to 100 keywords for bulk analysis, but I recommend starting with one keyword so you can explore the overview data first. After entering the keyword I select the target country. If I want more granularity I can choose state, city, municipality, or county level, but country-level data is a good default for most projects.
What does the volume number mean and why is it an estimate?
Volume shows the estimated number of monthly searches for the keyword in the selected country. I treat it as an educated guess rather than an exact figure because Google does not expose precise search numbers to third-party tools. The number is based on Semrush’s data set and gives me a practical sense of demand for the topic.
How do I interpret keyword difficulty in Semrush?
Keyword difficulty ranges from 0 to 100. A score near 0 means the keyword is relatively easy to rank for in the top 10, while a score near 100 means it will take significant on-page SEO, link building and promotion efforts to compete. If Semrush shows 100 percent for a keyword, I know ranking organically will be very resource intensive.
How can global volume and location data uncover new target markets?
Semrush shows both the local volume for your selected country and the global volume. The global number often multiplies the local figure many times over and highlights the biggest countries driving search interest. For example, a keyword may have far more searches in India than in the United States. I use this to identify additional target areas where I can expand my content strategy or run localized campaigns.
How does Semrush determine keyword intent and why does it matter?
Semrush assigns an intent label that helps me understand whether searchers are looking for information, a product, or a transactional page. For many queries like weight loss, Semrush typically marks the intent as informational, meaning users are looking for answers. Matching my content to user intent is critical because search engines increasingly prioritize pages that meet the searcher’s goal.
What does trend data tell me about seasonality and momentum?
Trend data displays search interest month by month from January to December. I look for seasonal spikes—Christmas gift queries explode in November and December—or for declining or rising interest. Trend patterns tell me whether a keyword is evergreen, seasonal, or a new upward opportunity worth chasing.
How do CPC, competitive density and PLA affect keyword value?
CPC is the Cost Per Click advertisers are willing to pay. A high CPC indicates higher commercial value and helps me estimate potential ROI if I rank organically. Competitive density is about Google Ads competition, not organic ranking. A 0.0 means few or no advertisers; 1.0 signals heavy ad competition. PLA stands for Product Listing Ads and shows shopping-type ads when relevant. Together these PPC metrics help me price campaigns and decide whether to pursue organic or paid strategies.
How do keyword ideas help expand my content and SEO reach?
From the overview I click into keyword ideas to see related keyword variations, question keywords, and keyword clusters. Semrush can return hundreds of thousands of related terms. For a single seed keyword it may show hundreds of thousands of variations and dozens of question keywords. I use question keywords for content structure and keyword clusters to organize topic-focused pages.
What do I learn from SERP analysis in Semrush?
SERP analysis gives a cached screenshot of the actual search results for the selected location and device. I can view up to 100 listings and see which SERP features appear: site links, reviews, images, videos, video carousel, people also ask, top stories, and more. This helps me understand how Google presents results for the keyword and where I might compete—organic snippet, video carousel or people also ask.
How do page authority, backlinks and URL keyword counts inform my strategy?
Semrush provides a proprietary page authority score, the number of backlinks, referring domains, estimated search traffic, and how many keywords each URL ranks for. I use these numbers to compare competitors. A high page score or thousands of backlinks suggests strong SEO power, but it does not guarantee a higher position. I also look at how many keywords a single URL ranks for—good content often ranks for dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of variations.
How do I export data and keep it up to date?
I export overview and SERP data to Excel or CSV for deeper analysis. Semrush also lets me update the matrix so the dashboard reflects the latest numbers; update limits depend on my plan. For bulk analysis I can paste up to 100 keywords and get a table with intent, volume, trend, keyword difficulty, CPC, and SERP features for each term.
How should I use the Keyword Overview as part of a workflow?
I treat Keyword Overview as step one in a seed keyword research process. It shows volume, difficulty, intent, trends, PPC signals and links to deeper tools like Keyword Magic and Keyword Manager. I use it to qualify ideas, identify potential markets, and decide which keywords to push into a content plan or a paid campaign.
I enter a seed keyword, check country and device, then use volume, intent and SERP features to decide whether to dig deeper.
FAQ
Can I analyze more than one keyword at a time?
Yes. Semrush allows bulk analysis for up to 100 keywords. I usually start with one keyword for the overview and then use bulk analysis when I have a list of variations like fat loss, lose weight, and related terms.
Is Semrush volume exact or estimated?
Volume is an estimate based on Semrush’s data set. It is an educated guess rather than an exact number because Google does not expose precise search counts to third-party tools.
What is the difference between keyword difficulty and competitive density?
Keyword difficulty estimates how hard it is to rank organically (0 to 100). Competitive density measures advertiser competition in Google Ads and is unrelated to organic ranking.
How do I use CPC to calculate potential ROI?
CPC shows how much advertisers pay per click. I use CPC to estimate the keyword’s commercial value and to model potential ROI if I achieve top organic positions, often combining it with estimated click-through rates and traffic forecasts.