Enter a URL and we pull the words and phrases it actually uses, ranked by frequency, so you can see what a page is really about.
Keyword discovery pulls the words and phrases a page is built around and ranks them by how often they appear. Instead of guessing the topic, you see the terms the page leans on, which is roughly how a search engine reads it too.
Enter a URL and you get single words and multi-word phrases, each with its count and density, plus a note on whether it shows up in the title and headings.
Frequency is the raw count. Density is that count as a share of total words, which tells you how dominant a term is. Placement is whether the term appears where it carries the most weight: the title and the headings.
A term that is frequent but never appears in a heading is a hint that the page is about something it never clearly states. That gap is often easy to close.
Check your own page first. If the keyword you want to rank for is not among the top terms, or it is missing from the title and H1, the page is sending mixed signals.
Run it on a page that already ranks well for your target term to see how they frame the topic, then line your own page up against it.