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SEO Keyword Research for Mom Bloggers (6 Free Tools That Actually Work)

SEO Keyword Research for Mom Bloggers (6 Free Tools That Actually Work)
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I wasted my first 6 months blogging by writing whatever I felt like. My posts went nowhere. Then I learned keyword research and my next 10 posts each brought in 500-2,000 monthly visitors. Same writing skill. Different topic selection. Massive results.

This guide walks you through SEO keyword research using only free tools. No Ahrefs, no Semrush, no $99/month subscriptions. Just the actual workflow I use today.

📌 Key Takeaway: According to Backlinko’s 2024 SEO research, 91% of pages get zero traffic from Google — almost always because the topic was not researched first. Bloggers who do basic keyword research see 4-7x more traffic than those who do not, with no extra writing effort. This guide shows the free 6-tool workflow that works. For SEO basics, see my SEO basics for mom bloggers guide.

The 6 Free Tools You Need

Tool What It Tells You Cost
1. Google Keyword PlannerSearch volume + competitionFree
2. Ubersuggest (free tier)Keyword ideas + difficulty3 searches/day free
3. AnswerThePublicQuestions people ask3 searches/day free
4. Google TrendsSearch trends over timeFree unlimited
5. Google Search itselfAutocomplete + "People also ask"Free unlimited
6. Keywords Everywhere extensionVolume next to every search$5 for 100K credits

The 5-Step Keyword Research Workflow

Step 1: Brain-Dump 20 Seed Keywords (5 min)

Open a Notion page or notebook. Write 20 phrases moms in your niche search. Examples for “postpartum recovery” niche:

  • postpartum essentials
  • postpartum belly
  • postpartum hair loss
  • when does postpartum bleeding stop
  • postpartum depression signs
  • C-section recovery
  • breast milk supply
  • postpartum exercise
  • postpartum diet
  • postpartum sex after birth

These are your starting “seed” keywords.

Step 2: Expand Each Seed (10 min)

Take each seed keyword. Go to Google search bar and type it slowly. Read the autocomplete suggestions — these are real searches Google has data on.

Example: “postpartum hair loss” autocomplete might show:

  • postpartum hair loss when does it stop
  • postpartum hair loss vitamins
  • postpartum hair loss male pattern
  • postpartum hair loss natural remedies

Each suggestion is a separate blog post idea.

Now scroll to the bottom of the search results page → “Related searches”. More keyword ideas.

For an even bigger list, click the “People also ask” boxes — Google literally tells you what readers also want answered.

Step 3: Check Search Volume (10 min)

For each promising keyword, check actual search volume in Google Keyword Planner:

  1. Sign up for free Google Ads account (no credit card needed for keyword planner only)
  2. Go to Tools → Keyword Planner → Discover new keywords
  3. Paste your keyword list
  4. Filter by country (US for global English audience)

What to look for:

Search Volume Range Suitable For
10-100/monthLong-tail wins for new blogs
100-1,000/monthSweet spot for blogs under 1 year
1,000-10,000/monthEstablished blogs (12+ months)
10,000-100,000/monthAuthority sites with backlinks
100,000+/monthSkip — dominated by major brands

Step 4: Validate with Real Search (10 min)

Take your top 5 keywords. Search each on Google. Look at the first page results.

Green flags (you can compete):

  • Results are mostly small/medium blogs
  • Multiple results are weak (thin content, old dates)
  • “People also ask” suggests Google wants more content

Red flags (skip this keyword):

  • First page is all Wikipedia, WebMD, Mayo Clinic, Healthline, Forbes
  • All results are paid product pages
  • Results are 10+ year old established authorities

Last check. Search the keyword in trends.google.com:

  • Steady or rising trend over 5 years → green light
  • Declining trend → skip
  • Seasonal trend (e.g., “back to school”) → write with timing in mind

Long-Tail Keywords Are Your Friend

A “long-tail” keyword is 4+ words specific to a problem. Examples:

❌ Too broad: “baby sleep” (search vol: 165,000, almost impossible to rank) ✅ Long-tail: “4 month sleep regression breastfeeding” (search vol: 2,400, much easier)

Long-tail wins because:

  1. Less competition
  2. Higher intent (specific = ready to act)
  3. Easier to satisfy reader’s exact need

External authority: According to Ahrefs’s 2024 study, 70% of all Google searches are long-tail keywords, but only 6% of bloggers target them.

My Personal Process (Real Example)

When I planned this Pinterest SEO article (Pinterest SEO 2026), here is what I did:

  1. Seed: “Pinterest SEO”
  2. Expanded (Google autocomplete): Pinterest SEO 2026, Pinterest SEO ranking factors, Pinterest SEO without followers, Pinterest SEO algorithm
  3. Volume check (Keyword Planner):
    • “Pinterest SEO 2026” — 880/mo, low competition
    • “Pinterest SEO without followers” — 320/mo, very low competition
  4. Validation: First page of “Pinterest SEO 2026” was mostly outdated 2022 posts → opportunity!
  5. Picked: “Pinterest SEO 2026” as primary, “rank pins without followers” as secondary keyword

Result: Article that targets a real query with low competition.

Tools to Avoid (Save Your Money)

  • Random “free keyword tools” via Pinterest/blog posts: 80% give fake data
  • Paid keyword tools at this stage: Wait until 50K+ monthly pageviews
  • “AI keyword research” services: Mostly the same data dressed up

💡 Further Reading: Apply this workflow with SEO basics for mom bloggers, how to write SEO meta descriptions, and how to outline a blog post to write SEO-ready content.

Conclusion

Keyword research is the #1 highest-ROI 30-minute task for any mom blogger. You can write the same number of words and 4-7x your traffic just by picking better topics.

Pick one keyword from your seed list today. Validate it with this workflow. Write the post next week. Watch what happens in 30-60 days.

References

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. Do I really need to do keyword research?
Yes, even for personal mom blogs. Writing without keyword research means you guess what readers search for. Keyword research means you know — and that data difference is the gap between blogs that grow and blogs that stagnate. You can do it free in 30 minutes per post.
Q2. Are free keyword tools as good as paid ones?
For mom bloggers, free tools (Google Keyword Planner, Ubersuggest free tier, AnswerThePublic, Google Trends) cover 90% of needs. Paid tools (Ahrefs, Semrush at $99-449/mo) are overkill until you reach 50,000+ monthly pageviews and need to outrank specific competitors.
Q3. What is a good search volume for a mom blog keyword?
For new blogs (under 6 months): target keywords with 100-1,000 monthly searches and low competition. For established blogs (12+ months): 1,000-10,000 monthly searches. Anything over 50,000 monthly searches is dominated by major brands.
Q4. How long does SEO keyword research take per blog post?
20-40 minutes once you have a system. The first 5 posts take longer (1-2 hours each) while you learn. By post 20, you can research, validate, and outline a post in under an hour.
Vega Lin

Written by

Mom of two based in Taiwan. 8+ years running digital advertising campaigns (Google Ads, Facebook Ads, SEO) for small businesses. Master's candidate in Digital Innovation at Tunghai University. Former English teacher who now codes her own AI-powered automations with Next.js and Claude AI.

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