Search Intent

Definition

Search intent is the reason behind a query. When someone types something into Google, they want one of four things: to learn something (informational), to find a specific site (navigational), to compare options before buying (commercial investigation), or to make a purchase or take action right now (transactional). Understanding which of these drives a given keyword is the difference between content that ranks and converts, and content that simply exists.

Why It Matters

Matching content to intent is the single biggest factor in whether organic traffic actually does anything for your business. You can rank first for a keyword and still generate zero revenue if the page answers the wrong question. Get intent right, and your SEO work compounds: higher click-through rates, longer time on page, better conversion rates, and Google rewarding you with more visibility because users are satisfied.

How It Works

Start by searching the keyword yourself and studying what Google already ranks. The results page is Google telling you what intent it has assigned to that query. If the top results are all blog posts, Google considers it informational; if they are product pages, it is transactional. You then build or restructure your content to match that format and depth. When your page aligns with what the searcher actually wants, engagement metrics improve and rankings follow.

Common Mistakes

The most common mistake is targeting a transactional keyword with an informational blog post, or vice versa. We see this constantly: businesses write 2,000-word guides for terms where Google is serving product listings, then wonder why the page sits on page three. Another frequent error is assuming intent is static. Google reclassifies intent over time as user behaviour shifts, so pages that once ranked well can drop simply because the intent moved underneath them. If you are not auditing your top pages against current SERPs at least quarterly, you are flying blind.

Questions About Search Intent

Straight answers to the questions people actually ask about search intent and how to use it properly.

Search the keyword in an incognito browser and look at the top ten results. Note the content format (guides, product pages, comparison articles, videos) and the common themes. That pattern is Google's interpretation of intent, and your content needs to match it. Tools like Semrush and Ahrefs also classify intent, but always verify against real SERPs because automated classifications are not always accurate.

Yes, and Google often hedges by showing mixed results. A query like 'CRM software' might return a mix of informational guides and product pages because some searchers want to learn and others want to buy. In these cases, you need to decide which intent your page serves and commit fully to it rather than trying to do both in one piece of content.

Absolutely. Bidding on keywords with informational intent when your landing page is a hard sell wastes budget. Your Quality Score drops, your cost per click rises, and conversion rates stay low. Aligning ad copy and landing pages to the actual intent behind the keyword is one of the fastest ways to improve paid search efficiency.

More often than most people realise. Seasonal shifts, industry changes, and evolving user expectations all influence how Google interprets a query. A term that was purely informational two years ago might now be commercial. Quarterly SERP reviews for your priority keywords catch these shifts before they cost you rankings.

We build intent mapping into every SEO and content engagement from the start. Every target keyword gets classified by intent, and content briefs are structured around what the searcher actually needs, not just what the client wants to say. More importantly, we transfer this capability to your team so intent analysis becomes part of your internal process long after our engagement ends.