Free Tools To Measure Social Media
Below are the 14 free tools to measure social media
influence on the World Wide Web.
SEMRush: What does
your site rank for?
Just plunk your blog or website URL into the search field a
top of the page and SEMRush will show the keywords it ranks highest for.
SEMRush will show you what you rank for, what your competitors rank for, what
Google AdWords you might consider buying and the terms you should be focusing
on in your blog posts.
Woopra: How are your
visitors behaving?
We like what we’ve seen of Woopra, a Web analytics tool that
provides real-time data about how users are interacting with your site. While
the visitor moves through your site, you can see where she came from, her
approximate location, and the actions she performs and where she goes off to
next. Woopra has a freemium model: While the free version of Woopra is severely
limited, you may soon want to move up to the Bronze ($4.95 per month) or Silver
edition ($14.95 per month), which let you segment your visitors (say, referrals
from Facebook, Twitter or StumbleUpon), print out customized reports and track
trends over time. Like SEMRush, Woopra helps you get your own house in order
before moving on to your outposts on the social Web.
Klout: Scoring across
three networks
Klout offers a daily summary of your organization’s or team
members’ social media influence, with a ranking that factors in your reach and
impact on Twitter (metrics such as re-tweets, follower counts, list
memberships, and unique mentions), Facebook and LinkedIn. Klout has an open API
that’s integrated into many Twitter apps: More than 750 partners use Klout
data, including Hootsuite, CoTweet and Attensity 360. For the end user, its
analytics platform is rich and easy to use, even if the methodology used in
spitting out a Klout Score is a bit opaque.
Facebook Insights:
Stats you can use
Facebook beefed up its Insights service this year, to good
effect. Now Facebook Insights resembles Google Analytics in many ways. As a
Page admin, your dashboard gives you access to a trove of data: daily active
users, monthly active users, daily new likes, and daily interactions such as
comments, geographic location of your visitors (broken down by country, city
and language), external referrals, internal link traffic and more. When you
have spikes of user engagement, Insights will show you caused them. It’ll show
you what content most interests your readers, and it’ll let you and your team
understand and analyze growth trends. One big limitation is that you can’t
access a lot of the data older than a week.
Bit.ly: Are your
promotions working?
Our favorite URL shortener, bit.ly, provides double duty by
offering analytics and click data for every link shortened. Click data lets you
see how effective your social media promotions are. Nothing much, just log into
account to see click through numbers. A new feature, bundles, lets you group
similar links together. Both the free version of bit.ly and Bit.ly Pro handle
our metrics needs without the need to upgrade to Enterprise ($995 per month).
TubeMogul: Who’s
watching your videos?
If you’re familiar with TubeMogul, you probably think of it
simply as a way to upload your videos to multiple sites, saving you the hassle
of uploading videos over and over. But TubeMogul has developed a rich set of
metrics lately, letting you see stats on how many people have watched your
videos across networks. Real-time analytics include views, viewed minutes,
audience geography, embeds, referring sites and search terms and more, all via
your dashboard. It helps us to cross-compare by category, content delivery
network, advertising mix or video player. And it’s free!
YouTube Insight: What
parts of your video are ‘hot’?
YouTube Insight is a self-service analytics and reporting
tool that enables anyone with a YouTube account to view detailed statistics
about the audience for the videos that you upload to the site. Use the
information to analyze marketing your efforts — both on and off YouTube — and
determine how best to optimize your campaigns. Watch the video (natch) and see
metrics around views and popularity, how people get to your site, the content
clicked on, average pages per visit, which parts of your video are “hot” and
“cold,” demographic information and community engagement.
Google Analytics:
Powerful & easy to use
Google Analytics has become such an indispensable part of
the analytics landscape that it’s not surprising we get a little blasé about
it. But let’s not forget the genius of this tool: You get super-rich insights
into your website traffic and marketing effectiveness — for free. Create
better-targeted ads, track sales and conversions, measure your site engagement
goals, track Web-enabled phones and mobile apps, integrate business info and
develop applications that access Google Analytics data.
Alexa & Compete:
How do you stack up?
When was the last time you looked to see how your site or
blog was doing over time? Google Analytics will provide traffic data more
accurately than analytics services like Compete, Quantcast and Alexa, but these
firms also show trends, a different set of demographics guesswork and, most
pointedly, how your site measures up against your competitors’. Alexa offers
search analytics showing the top queries driving traffic to your site from
search engines.
Feedburner: Are your
feeds radiating out?
Now owned by Google, Feedburner is the easiest way to roll
your own feed — and then sit back and watch the stats roll it. It’ll tell you
how many people have subscribed to your blog or site — or even a section of
your blog, if you set it up that way. Dig deeper and you’ll find your Feed
Stats Dashboard, revealing average subscribers, reach, popular feed items
(recently and all time) and other interesting factoids. For instance, we didn’t
know Cambridge (Mass.) Community Television was aggregating Socialbrite’s open
content via our feeds until we spotted it in Feedburner.
Twitter tools! A
wealth of options
There are a ton of third-party Twitter apps to measure your
Twitter grandiosity. Here are a few of my favorites:
Twitalyzer works
for any Twitter account and gives you information about their impact score
(percentile score) and the type of influencer they are.
Grader.com is a
suite of tools that helps you measure and analyze your marketing efforts. It
shows the bio, location, history and the number of followers of the Twitter
user you’re researching, and more.
Twittercounter
lets you count registrations and comments on a particular campaign you’re
running.
Backtweets shows
you how many people you reach on Twitter and helps you understand how people
interact with your brand and your content.
Type your Twitter ID into Twitterholic (where you can also see the most popular Twitter users
in your city) or Twinfluence or Twittorati to see what kind of impact you’re
making.
How far did your tweet travel? tweetreach offers reach metrics, statistics and analysis for
marketing and PR professionals. Retweetrank, Tweetmeme, Twitturly and
Retweetist also measure how often you get retweeted.
Tweeteffect
determines which tweets make you lose or gain followers.
My Tweeple is a
basic tool that lets you manage who you’re following and who’s following you.
Twittersheep
analyzes your follower profiles to assess their likelihood of engagement.
Plus, a whole lot of other Twitter analytics apps.
PostRank: A modest
tracking dashboard
PostRank provides detailed information on Tweets, stumbles,
Diggs and FriendFeed all in one place. It’s suited to blogs and websites with a
lot of content. Under its free plan, you can Track and compare your sites and
your competition — up to five sites in all — to get the full picture of your
social engagement. You can also track your static and offsite content (PDFs,
YouTube videos, SlideShare content) for up to 10 sites.
Flickr: Are your
pictures trending?
Flickr was one of the earliest social networks to provide
metrics about how many people are viewing your photos. For instance, you’ll be
able to see such statistics as views for your photos, sets and galleries —
today, yesterday and all time (3.4 million for me, how about you?) — Your most
viewed photos and videos and how many have been geo tagged or have comments. I just
wish Flickr would tell you how many people are embedding your photos on their
sites.
Soovox: For brand
lovers
Soovox has a slightly different take on the Klout model:
Discover your Social IQ, share your likes and earn rewards. Your “social
influence quotient” measures your online social presence footprint and assigns
it a value that gets translated into rewards. The money you make can go to your
organization or to your favorite charity. Soovox is more geared to individuals
who like to share their opinions about brands and products they love, but it’s
worth a look.
Other tools - A worth
look
Here are some other metrics tools we like. Not all of them
are free:
Seoquake is a
powerful tool for Mozilla Firefox, aimed at helping web publishers who deal
with search engine optimization and Internet promotion of websites. Seoquake
allows users to assess important SEO parameters of an Internet project on the
fly.
Social Report
offers a social network performance tracking, monitoring and reporting tool. It
comes with a 30-day trial and prices starting at just $9/month.
Foursquare and Yelp
provides business dashboards that have the ability to review check-in data and
other metrics.
Technorati and
BlogPulse are blog search engines. Look for metrics around bloggers’ influence
and authority.
Google Trends
provides information on Web search trends around key terms and topics. It shows
how often your topics have appeared in Google News stories and in which
geographic region people have searched for them the most.
Xinureturns
provides a dashboard overview of your site’s standing in social media. Run a
report and you’ll receive information on Technorati, Googe PageRank, Diggs and
even backlinks to your website.
Tribe Monitor is
a social statistics aggregator that helps yo keep track of your fan base on
Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and more.
Source:
www.socialbrite.org
Free Tools To Measure Social Media
Reviewed by Journey Of Digital Media
on
12/26/2013
Rating:
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