Google Trends shows you how search interest in specific topics changes over time, across regions and between related queries. For Australian businesses planning content, it provides a free, real-time window into what your audience is actually interested in before you invest time creating content about it. Combined with structured keyword research, Trends data makes your content calendar significantly more targeted.
1. Find seasonal content opportunities
Many topics have predictable seasonal search cycles. By entering a keyword into Google Trends and viewing the past 12 months, you can see exactly when interest peaks. A tax accountant can see when searches for "tax return" spike (typically June through August in Australia). A garden centre can identify when searches for specific plants or gardening tasks peak each year. Publishing content four to six weeks before peak search interest means your content is indexed and ranking by the time people start looking for it.
2. Compare topic interest before committing to content
Google Trends lets you compare up to five topics side by side. Before investing in a substantial piece of content, compare the search interest of your potential topics and choose the one with the strongest and most sustained demand. This prevents spending hours on content that few people are searching for.
3. Identify rising trends in your industry
The "Year in Search" and "Trending Searches" sections of Google Trends reveal topics that are growing in interest. Writing about an emerging topic before it reaches peak competition means you can establish your content as an authoritative reference while competition is still low, rather than entering a crowded space later.
4. Filter search data for Australia specifically
Google Trends allows you to filter by country and even by Australian state. Search behaviour in Australia often differs from global trends. A term that is declining globally may still be growing in Australia. Always check Australian data when creating content for an Australian audience rather than relying on global trend data.
5. Find related queries for content depth
The "Related queries" section in Google Trends shows what else people are searching for in connection with your primary topic. These are excellent sources of subtopics and supporting content ideas. A blog post on the primary topic can link out to shorter pieces on each related query, building a content cluster that improves your topical authority in Google's eyes.
6. Time your social media content
Trending topics on Google often mirror trending conversations on social media. When a topic appears in Google Trends as a breakout search, publishing relevant social content quickly can capture the attention of an engaged audience in real time.
7. Validate content ideas from your audience
If a customer or sales team member suggests a content topic they hear repeatedly from prospects, use Google Trends to verify whether that question is being searched broadly enough to justify the content investment. It is an efficient way to prioritise content requests based on actual demand rather than internal assumptions.

Maria oversees content strategy and campaign coordination at Web Like Web, ensuring every piece of content is delivered on time, on brief and aligned with client business goals. She brings structure and strategic thinking to content marketing that produces measurable results.