Common search engine FAQs answered by experts

How many keywords should you target on one page?

On one page, you should usually target one primary keyword and a small cluster of closely related phrases that share the same search intent.

In practice, that looks like 1 main phrase plus 3 to 8 close variants, synonyms, and “same-intent” questions, not 25 different services crammed onto one URL. A page has limited space in the title tag, headings, and first screen of copy, so if you try to chase too many different terms, the page reads scattered and visitors bounce. If you want a clean plan for mapping keywords to pages, our SEO services work starts by grouping queries by intent first, then writing one clear page per group.

What “one topic per page” means for local businesses

For Orlando and Central Florida businesses, “one topic” usually equals one service (or one service plus one location). For example, “emergency dentist Orlando” and “teeth whitening Orlando” belong on two separate pages because the visitor mindset, content sections, and call-to-action are different. Same with “termite treatment” vs “bed bug exterminator” for pest control, or “DUI lawyer” vs “divorce lawyer” for a law firm.

Page typeBest focusTypical target setWhen to split into another page
Core service pageOne service1 primary + 3-6 close variantsWhen a variant needs different sections, proof, or pricing talk
Service + city pageOne service in one market1 primary + 4-8 local modifiers and phrasing variantsWhen you also need pages for other cities or neighborhoods
Location pageOne real office location1 primary + 2-5 brand and location variationsWhen you add another physical location or different hours/teams
Blog post or guideOne problem, cost, or comparison1 primary + 5-10 question-style variantsWhen the post becomes two different articles with different takeaways

How we pick the “right” keywords for a page

We start with the primary phrase that matches what you want the visitor to do next, then we add supporting phrases that mean the same thing in normal language. If a supporting phrase changes the meaning, we treat it as a new page idea, not a “secondary keyword.” If you want a deeper explanation of how one URL can still show up for many searches, see can a single page rank for multiple keywords.

  • Pick 1 primary phrase that matches the page goal.
  • Collect close variants (singular/plural, wording swaps, local modifiers, common questions).
  • Work the primary phrase into the title, H1, and first paragraph in a natural way.
  • Use variants where they fit, often in H2s, FAQs, and image alt text when relevant.
  • If you catch yourself forcing phrases into sentences, you are targeting too many.

If you are unsure whether two phrases belong on one page, use this quick test: would the same visitor be happy with the same page and the same next step for both searches? If yes, keep them together. If not, split them and let each page do one job well.

SEO service quote

Internet marketing FAQs

Smart Strategies, Real Growth
Turn data into powerful insights that fuel authentic brand expansion.
call to action

Don't Go! Get a Free Website Audit

Discover hidden opportunities for growth with a free, data-driven website audit!