The Words You Wouldn’t Say Out Loud Still Matter Online
As businesses, we naturally want to talk the way we talk. We know our industry. We know our services. We know the words that feel right to us. It’s easy to assume our clients talk the same way. Most of the time, they don’t.
People search differently than they speak. They search differently than they write emails. And they definitely search differently than businesses describe themselves on their websites. The words they type into Google are often simpler, shorter, and more direct. Those words are your keywords. They’re what connect your website to real people looking for help.
That can feel uncomfortable. Keywords can sound awkward in writing. Sometimes they feel repetitive. Other times they just don’t sound like something you’d ever say out loud. That discomfort is usually a sign you’re thinking like a business owner, not like a searcher. And that’s normal.
What matters is understanding that this approach is intentional. It’s not lazy writing. It’s thoughtful strategy.
Why Keywords Don’t Always Sound Natural
People don’t search the way they talk. When someone is sitting at a coffee shop explaining a problem to a friend, they use full sentences. When they open a browser and search, they don’t.
Searches are often short. They’re direct. They’re sometimes repetitive. Someone might search a phrase multiple times with only small variations. That doesn’t mean they lack creativity. It means they’re trying to get answers quickly.
Most search terms focus on problems, services, and location. People want solutions. They want them nearby. Branding language rarely shows up in those searches. The phrases businesses love to use often never cross a customer’s mind when they’re typing into a search bar.
People Search With Intent, Not Style
Search behavior is driven by intent. People are looking for something specific. They want clarity. They want speed. They want to know they’re in the right place.
This is why “good enough” wording often beats clever wording in search. A phrase doesn’t need to be elegant to work. It needs to be clear. Google is built to connect people with relevant results, not reward poetic phrasing.
The goal isn’t to sound impressive in isolation. The goal is to be found when someone needs what you offer.
The Difference Between Brand Language and Search Language
Brand voice is how your business wants to sound. It’s thoughtful. It’s intentional. It’s part of how you build trust and recognition.
Search language is different. It reflects how people think when they’re trying to solve a problem. These two languages are not the same, and that’s okay.
Homepage copy and SEO copy have different jobs. In reality, the same headings, sentences, and paragraphs often need to satisfy both. That’s where strategy comes in.
Avoiding search language entirely in the name of brand purity can hurt visibility. A website can look great and still struggle to get traffic if it never uses the terms people are actually searching. When handled intentionally, brand language and search language can live on the same site without conflict.
Why We Focus on What People Are Actually Searching
Keyword data reflects real behavior. It shows what people are typing into Google every day. We don’t guess at keywords. We don’t pick phrases because they sound nice or because we think they should work.
We focus on what people are actually searching for.
A good example is a phrase like “Green Bay Web Design.” To a business owner, that can feel clunky. It might not sound like how you describe yourself. But it’s a phrase people actively search. Ignoring it means missing opportunities to show up for people who are already looking.
Sometimes these keywords feel odd. Sometimes they feel overly simple. But to the person searching, they feel familiar. They feel like exactly what they just typed. Your competitors might avoid those terms because they sound weird. Your customers recognize them immediately.
How We Make Keywords Work Without Making Your Site Sound Weird
Using keywords well doesn’t mean stuffing them everywhere. It’s about placement. It’s about structure. It’s about writing with intention.
Content should always be written for humans first. Once keywords are placed where they matter, the writing gets edited for flow. The goal is clarity, not repetition. Keywords should support the message, not overpower it.
When done right, most visitors won’t even notice the keywords. They’ll just feel like the site makes sense.
The Goal Isn’t Perfect Phrasing, It’s Being Found
Keywords are tools. They’re not branding decisions. They exist to connect your business with people who are actively searching for what you offer.
Sounding right online doesn’t mean sounding clever. It means being visible to the right people at the right time. A well written site can still use the language people search with.
If balancing keywords and writing feels uncomfortable, that’s normal. If it feels confusing, that’s a conversation we’re always happy to have.








