Content strategy 4 min read

Long-tail Keywords

Definition

Long-tail keywords are longer, more specific search phrases that typically contain three or more words and address search intent more specifically. Unlike broad keywords like "gym" or "protein powder," long-tail keywords are phrases like "best CrossFit gym for beginners in Brooklyn" or "whey protein isolate for lactose intolerance."

Why long-tail keywords matter for your fitness business

For your fitness business, long-tail keywords represent searchers who know exactly what they're looking for. These phrases have lower search volume than broad terms, but they attract more qualified traffic because the person searching has a specific need or intent.

Long-tail keywords are also easier to rank for because they face less competition than broad, generic terms. 91.8% of all search queries are long tail. These searches also convert better because the specificity indicates stronger intent. Someone searching "home workout equipment" is browsing, but someone searching "adjustable dumbbells under $200 for a small apartment" is ready to buy.

How long-tail keywords differ from short-tail keywords

The intent behind long-tail searches is typically clearer. Broad terms could mean anything, but specific phrases reveal exactly what the searcher needs, making it easier for your content to match their expectations and convert them into customers.

What good looks like, and what to prioritise

Strong long-tail keyword targeting means matching content type to search intent. Blog posts and FAQ pages suit informational queries; service pages and product pages suit commercial and transactional ones. Prioritise long-tail keywords with commercial or transactional intent (phrases that include "best," "buy," "near me," or "for [specific goal]") over purely informational searches when you want to drive conversions.

Strong signal
Specific
Three or more words, clear intent, lower competition = realistic path to rankings
Developing
Mixed
Some long-tail targeting but content doesn't fully match the specificity of the query
Weak signal
Broad
Targeting one or two-word head terms with no realistic path to first-page rankings

How to find and use long-tail keywords effectively

Use Google's autocomplete feature by typing your main keyword and noting the phrases Google suggests based on real user searches. Check the "People also ask" and "Related searches" sections at the bottom of results pages for question-based and specific variations.

Review your Google Search Console data to identify long-tail phrases that already bring traffic to your site, then create dedicated content around high-performing terms. Visit our keyword research page for advice on how to find low difficulty keywords, or a curated list of keywords you can target.

What this looks like in practice

If you're a supplement brand targeting creatine, you wouldn't just optimise for "creatine." You'd target "creatine for women over 40," or "creatine loading protocol for beginners," and maybe even "creatine vs creatine HCL for endurance athletes." Each phrase attracts a searcher with a specific, answerable need.

Question to ask your agency

"Which long-tail keywords are we targeting, and how does the content we have already align with it? How much new content will we need? How do these long-tail keywords fit into our overall content strategy?"