Keyword Finder
Find the questions people ask and the buyer-intent phrases they search — with real volume data attached — instead of drowning in ten thousand generic suggestions.
Free · no signup · real data — provided by Keywords Everywhere, embedded live below.
What the Keyword Finder does
Where a raw keyword expander gives you breadth, the Keyword Finder gives you intent. It slices Google Suggest data into the phrases that matter for publishers and stores: questions ("how", "why", "can you"), comparisons ("vs", "alternative"), and buyer modifiers ("best", "cheap", "for beginners") — each with monthly search volume, CPC, competition, and trend.
Question keywords are the raw material for FAQ sections and AI-search visibility — the kind of extractable Q&A blocks that get quoted by ChatGPT and Perplexity. Pair it with the Google Keyword Tool for breadth-first research, then check what competitors already cover with the Keyword Gap Analysis.
How to use it
- Enter a seed topic — the broader product or subject you want to cover.
- Filter to question or buyer-intent phrases depending on whether you’re writing informational or commercial content.
- Sort by volume and trend; a rising low-volume question often beats a flat high-volume head term.
- Export the shortlist and turn each strong question into a post section or FAQ entry.
Keyword Finder FAQ
What counts as a buyer-intent keyword?
Phrases that signal purchase readiness: modifiers like best, top, review, price, discount, alternative, or "for [use case]". They convert far better than generic informational queries because the searcher is already comparing options.
Why do question keywords matter in 2026?
Question queries feed featured snippets and, increasingly, AI answers. Content that answers a specific question cleanly is what LLM-powered search engines quote and cite — so question keywords now earn visibility in two systems at once.
Does it show zero-volume keywords?
Yes — some suggested phrases show no measurable volume. Don’t discard them automatically: autocomplete only suggests phrases people type, so a "zero volume" question can still bring steady long-tail traffic.