Keyword Extractor
Paste any product listing or description. The extractor pulls buyer-relevant keywords, groups them into primary, secondary, and long-tail, and scores each one for relevance.
How the keyword extractor works
You paste any product listing, description, or block of product text. It reads what you gave it, pulls out the words and phrases a buyer would type to find something like it, and sorts them into primary head terms, secondary modifiers, and long-tail phrases. Each keyword comes back with a relevance score so you can see which ones sit closest to your product.
This is generic AI ranking keywords against the text you typed. It cannot see what buyers in your category actually search for, how they compare options, or the exact phrases they reach for. The full DecodeIQ platform maps that buyer language across Reddit, YouTube, forums, and reviews first, then writes listing copy that speaks it back.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the keyword extractor return?
Fifteen to twenty-five keywords pulled from your text, grouped as primary head terms, secondary modifiers, and long-tail phrases. Each keyword carries a relevance score from zero to one.
What is the difference between primary, secondary, and long-tail?
Primary keywords are high-volume head terms. Secondary keywords add a modifier to a head term. Long-tail keywords are three or more word phrases a buyer types when they know what they want.
Is the keyword extractor free?
Yes. Three free generations per day, or five with your email on file, and no signup. DecodeIQ earns from its paid buyer intelligence platform, not from this tool.
Does this show real search volume?
No. It ranks keywords by relevance to your text, which is generic AI. The full platform surfaces the terms buyers actually use to search and compare across networks.
More free tools
Built by a buyer intelligence platform
This free tool covers one step. DecodeIQ scans real buyer conversations across Reddit, YouTube, forums, and review sites, then writes listing copy in the language buyers use to decide.
See DecodeIQ for Amazon Sellers