Web Content Studio, by Dr Andy Williams, is nifty software that I’ve had the pleasure of using for the last few weeks. Yes, I was lucky enough to get a pre-release version because I’ve known Andy for many years.

Before I chat about the actual software, I want to just say that Dr Andy is one of the most respected SEO experts online. Unlike many people in the “make money online” niche, also known as Internet marketing, Dr Andy actually helps educate people rather than just blast them with email promotions. I suspect it’s due to his background as a teacher, which shines through in his newsletters and blog posts… Andy loves to explain the basics to people rather than simply sell them the latest gizmo.

OK, so back to Web Content Studio…. what is it?

Well, it’s a suite of tools contained within one software application which helps you build quality, on-topic webpages. Unlike regular HTML editors, it doesn’t just give you a fancy interface and say, “have at it!”, Web Content Studio contains digging tools. It helps you research the keywords that Google will EXPECT you to use when you write an article in your niche.

So, if you say to Web Content Studio, “I want to write an article on Origami”, it will query Google for the word “origami”, then visit the pages listed at the top of the search engine results and extract the words on the pages. It then finds which words and phrases appear most often… THOSE are the theme keywords… the ones you will need to have in your article to gain good a search engine ranking for it.

Huh? What Are Theme Keywords?

Perhaps an example is required. When you type “Apple” into Google, how does it know whether you’re looking for “Apple computers” or “Apple pie recipe”? It doesn’t. You need to give it more information, such as, “Apple iPhone” or “Apple Pie”. The same goes for your webpages. If Google finds “Apple” and “iPhone” on your pages, it can guess it’s a technology page, right? Whereas if it finds “Apple” and “Pastry” it can guess the page is related to cooking. This kind of word-relationship helps Google to know which ads to show on your page when you paste in their Adsense code. On your Apple technology page you see iPhone ads. On your Apple cookery page you see homemade apple pie recipe ads.

But here’s the thing… Google uses the words on the page and their relationship with each other to determine how good your page is! Google has indexed billions of pages. It KNOWS which words to expect to see on your page about apple pie, words such as ”crust”, “bake”, “oven” etc. These are the “theme keywords”, and the more of them you have on your page, the better. This kind of technology is known as semantics, applied semantics, latent semantic indexing, LSI and a whole bunch of other jargon… but we’ll just call it themeing, like Dr Andy. In his latest report, Dr Andy shows how important it is to use as many theme keywords as possible to rank in the top 10 search results. You can download the WebContentStudio report here. No opt-in required.

Where Do I Find Theme Words?

Well, that’s the magic of Web Content Studio. First you can use the tools to help you research your article and find out what people are talking about in your niche and the questions they’re asking…

Then you just run the spider from within WCS and it grabs the theme keywords for any phrase you type in….

You then switch to the article writer, which is a WYSIWG editor, and type your article. Here’s an explanation of the WYSIWYG editor…

You can even analyse the finished article (or any webpage/text) to get a “theme report” which shows you where your theme keywords are in the article and tells you how well written the article is!

Web Content Studio Bonus

If you decide to get Web Content Studio to help you gain top search engine rankings, I’d like to offer you a bonus. Simply order through this link and I’ll email you my $47 “Cheatsheet” on cracking the search engine top ten positions for free!

Click here to get Web Content Studio and claim my exclusive bonus!