Growth Marketing Glossary

Keyword Marketing

key·word mar·ket·ingnoun

Meeting people at their search. Keyword marketing targets the words people type — aligning content and ads with real queries so a brand shows up exactly when intent is highest.

a search querykeywords target intentthe right reach
Schematic — targeting the words people search
Term
Keyword marketing
Is
Targeting the words people search
Powers
Search ads and SEO content
Captures
Intent at the moment of search

Parts of speech & senses

keyword marketing · noun
  1. Keyword marketing is targeting the specific words and phrases people search for, using them to reach the right audience with relevant content or ads at the moment of intent. "Keyword marketing put their guide in front of people searching the exact problem."

What keyword marketing is

Keyword marketing is the practice of building marketing around the specific words and phrases people type into search engines. Because a search query is a direct expression of what someone wants right now, the keywords people use are a precise signal of intent — and keyword marketing aligns content and ads with those keywords to reach people at exactly the moment they're looking. It underlies both paid search (bidding on keywords to show ads) and SEO (creating content to rank for keywords).

The discipline starts with keyword research — discovering what the target audience actually searches, in what volume, with what intent, and how competitive each term is — and then using those keywords to guide what content to create and what terms to target or bid on. The whole approach rests on a simple insight: meeting people at their own search, in their own words, is one of the most effective ways to reach them, because the intent is already there.

Why keyword marketing works

Keyword marketing works because it captures intent rather than interrupting it. Most advertising pushes a message at people who weren't asking for it; keyword marketing reaches people at the moment they've declared what they want by searching for it. That intent makes search one of the highest-converting channels — someone searching 'best running shoes for flat feet' is far closer to buying than someone passively shown a shoe ad, and keyword marketing is how a brand shows up for exactly that query.

It also aligns marketing with real demand. Keyword research reveals what people actually want and ask, which informs not just where to advertise but what content to create and even what the market cares about. Done well, keyword marketing is demand-capture: positioning a brand in front of existing, expressed intent — efficient because the audience is self-selecting by searching, and measurable because each keyword's performance can be tracked.

Doing keyword marketing well

Doing keyword marketing well means matching keywords to genuine intent and to what the brand can credibly satisfy. Different keywords carry different intent — informational ('how to'), commercial ('best'), transactional ('buy') — and the right response (content, ad, page) differs accordingly. It means choosing terms where the brand can realistically compete and convert, creating genuinely relevant content or ads for them, and measuring and refining by what each keyword actually delivers.

The failures are targeting keywords with no real intent or relevance to the offer, chasing high-volume terms the brand can't compete for or convert, mismatching the response to the query's intent, and keyword stuffing (cramming keywords unnaturally, which search engines penalize). The discipline is intent-matched, relevant, competitive keyword targeting — meeting people at their search with something that genuinely answers it.

Worked example. A brand advertises broadly and creates generic content, reaching lots of people but few who actually want what it sells. Adopting keyword marketing changes the approach: research reveals the specific phrases its real customers search — including high-intent commercial queries — and the brand targets those terms with relevant content (to rank) and search ads (to appear), matching the response to each query's intent. Now it shows up exactly when people express demand, and conversion climbs because the intent was already there. The lesson: keyword marketing targets the words people search to meet them at the moment of intent, capturing existing demand rather than interrupting it — effective when keywords are matched to genuine intent and to what the brand can credibly satisfy. (Illustrative; RGM analysis.)
Failure modes to watch. Targeting keywords with no real intent or relevance to the offer; chasing high-volume terms the brand can't compete for or convert; mismatching the response to the query's intent; and keyword stuffing that search engines penalize.

Synonyms & antonyms

Synonyms

search marketingkeyword targeting

Antonyms

interruptive advertisinguntargeted reach

Origin & history

Keyword marketing grew with search engines, building marketing around the words people search to capture intent at the moment of the query — the foundation of both paid search and SEO.

Etymology: source.

Usage trends

Search interest for this term over the last five years:

View interest-over-time on Google Trends →

Common questions

What is keyword marketing?
Targeting the specific words and phrases people search for — using them to reach the right audience with relevant content or ads at the moment of intent. It underlies paid search and SEO.
Why does keyword marketing work?
Because it captures intent rather than interrupting it — reaching people at the moment they've declared what they want by searching, which makes search one of the highest-converting channels.
How do you do keyword marketing well?
Match keywords to genuine intent and to what the brand can credibly satisfy — choosing competitive, relevant terms, matching the response (content or ad) to the query's intent, and refining by what each keyword actually delivers.

Resources & people to follow

Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.

Related training

Disciplines

Areas of marketing where keyword marketing is a core concern:

Sources

  1. trendsGoogle Trends — "keyword marketing"