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However, if we look at “whipped coffee without sugar” we see the opposite

Posted: Sun Feb 09, 2025 9:42 am
by Rina7RS
The answer depends a lot on how Google views these keywords. Does it view them as part of the same topic like how to make whipped coffee? Or does it view them all as separate topics? You can get a sense of this by looking at the Google search results.


For example, we see some of the same result pages for “how to make whipped coffee” and “what is whipped coffee”.




We also see that most of the results for both searches are articles about making whipped coffee. This tells us that “what is whipped coffee” is a subtopic of the topic of how to make whipped coffee.


Therefore, it might make more sense to target these two keywords on one page rather than creating two separate pages.



Almost all of the results are specifically about ghana mobile database making sugar-free, healthy whipped coffee with cream, not just any whipped coffee with cream. This tells us that “whipped coffee without sugar” is not a subtopic of making whipped coffee with cream even though whipped coffee without sugar is still actually whipped coffee.


The problem with this method is that it’s mostly manual and slow, so if you have a lot of keywords to analyze, it might take some time.


In Ahref Keywords Explorer, our solution to this problem is to show a “parent topic” for each keyword. It tells you whether you can include these subtopics within the parent topic.