8 free online
marketing tools that every “hands-on” marketer should use
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1. Reviewing
the latest developments in your industry
There still isn’t a better
alternative than for reviewing
mentions of your brand name, competitor or sector names by entering keywords,
so it’s widely used.
Although RSS isn’t “in vogue” as
it was 5+ years ago, I still find there’s no substitute for using this as
a listening post for developments in your industry. When I wrote the previous
post I used Google Reader to
categorise sites to keep up-to-date with the latest developments in digital.
When Google withdrew this since there was no revenue in it (Boo!) I
used Reed as an offline
client on my Macbook Air and iOS for a while. But now I recommend Feedly since it's the most popular
so you can see by the 'voice of the crowd' which posts are most popular.
Similar to the feature in PostRank that Google also killed off. Although
feed readers aren't in fashion they are the most efficient way to scan the
latest news in different categories. So if you don't use them try Feedly out -
our analytics shows it's one of the most common referrers to Smart
Insights - do bookmark us!
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2. Managing
social media updates
I’ve used Hootsuite for posting updates to social networks
and reviewing what others are saying for nearly five years now after using Tweetdeck back in the day -
Twitter killed that one off for general use. Hootsuite seems to be
comfortably the most popular free tool for posting and reviewing social media
updates, but many still don’t know it, it can be used as a personal social
media management tool too. It enables you to quickly post to all the main
social networks including Google+ company pages and review conversations and
messages. I’ve trialled many paid tools, but none come close. The paid version
is worthwhile IMO for adding campaign tracking and extra reports.
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3. Finding
influencers
There is no single free tool that
works well for this - please suggest alternatives. You can use reputation tools
like Klout, Kred or Peerindex, but I find that the use of Twitter
autofollow means that this often skews the results.
LinkedIn sector skills used
to be the best source for finding business influencers because of grouping
by narrower topics - but LinkedIn killed this - monetisation again. LinkedIn
advanced search is probably the best replacement.
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4. Understanding customer search
behaviour
With search still driving the
majority of visits, leads and sales for most businesses online, I believe that
even marketers who outsource their SEO need to understand different types of
customer behaviour when searching to help develop strategies for getting
visibility AND creating content and messages to help meet consumer needs.
When I first wrote this post I
recommended the Google Keyword Tool, but now it's been renamed to the Google Keyword Planner, but is still
an indispensable tool alongside the Google
Webmastr Tools integration now that The
Growth of Not Provided keywords means
we can't use analytics reliably to find referring keywords. The Google
Keyword Planner (tutorial) is
still indispensable for this - I don’t think I have ever done a client training
or consulting project where I haven’t used it! It's harder to get to now it's
integrated into Google AdWords, but it's still free if you don't invest in
AdWords.
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5. Competitor
site benchmarking
It used to be that Google
AdPlanner was unbeatable for comparing audience size and dimension. That's been
folded into AdWords as the Campaign Planner and now limited to media
sites, but still useful for finding size and quality of audience for partner
and media sites and don't forget about the related Google Placement Targeting
Tool useful for remarketing and research.
Today, my 'go to' tool for
benchmarking is , a freemium tool
launched in 2013 and offering free stats on all sites including referrers.
Here's how Smart Insights looks:
Chris Soames has a another post
here on the main. You will probably have to fall back on Alexa or Compete today
which don’t tend to give realistic estimates outside of the US. I have also
have an in-depth post recommending many other
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6. Off-page
backlink analysis for SEO
Lots of tools in this category,
see our comparison of 6 best backlink analysis tools.
Of these, Majestic and Moz Open
Site Explorer have to be the “must use” tools. I think for non-SEOs, the
Backlink History is great for basic benchmarking of competitor success in
gaining backlinks although link quality isn’t shown.
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7. On-page
markup analysis for SEO
Hubspots Site, no for reviewing
on-page for SEO is often mentioned as a useful tool by people on courses.
For reviewing on-page markup like
headings and also mobile screen resizing I find Chris Pederick's Web Developer Toolbar for Chrome and Firefox essential. The
Moz Toolbar is better from an SEO POV. Here's an example of the overlay to show
our 'semantic markup':
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8.
Understanding overall online marketing effectiveness
I believe that Google Analytics
or an equivalent is essential for all who work in marketing to master at some level.
To help here, we have many
articles of advice you can access from our Google
Analytics hub The most popular is on using Google
Analytics for social media marketing
If you know all these tools, try
the Google Agency Toolkit where they group all their tools
together.
Looking for a more comprehensive
range of tools? See this excellent directory from Razor Social collated by Ian
Cleary for a bigger selection of online
marketing tools and services where you can select by category.
I hope this compilation is
useful, what do you find most useful of the digital marketing tools we have
covered here and other tools we don't?
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