How to spy on competition The latest news about SEO, Online Marketing, Social Media Marketing from the best SEO software Fri, 04 Oct 2024 05:50:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 SEO Competitor Analysis: Moving Up the Food Chain in 10 Steps https://www.webceo.com/blog/seo-competitor-analysis/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/seo-competitor-analysis/#comments Thu, 03 Oct 2024 08:49:00 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=7463

It’s great to have your own website. Even more so when it’s more than just a hobby to you. A serious project with a clear purpose to make someone’s life better – I think everybody should attempt this at least...

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It’s great to have your own website. Even more so when it’s more than just a hobby to you. A serious project with a clear purpose to make someone’s life better – I think everybody should attempt this at least once. Of course, it’s a bumpy road with many challenges and numerous problems.

For example, here’s one problem known to every webmaster in the world: never seeing your site on Google’s page #1. With over 200 million active sites on the Internet, it’s always a wild race to the top with no end in sight regarding competition and frustration. Unless you know what you are doing, you will be struggling to get any user traffic at all, let alone turn it into anything profitable.

But what if you are doing everything you can and somebody else is still ahead of you? Why, if they insist on getting in your way…

This means war!

And wars begin with collecting information. In this case, SEO intel.

SEO competitor analysis can be used to rob your opponent of all the spoils: rankings, user traffic, even conversions. And the more thoroughly you research your competition, the better the results. Let’s see how you can analyze them and what you can do with all the information you’ve obtained.

1. Perform a SWOT analysis

Before you take on your Internet rivals, turn your attention to your current state of affairs. There are sites out there which are your competitors, and you are theirs. How good of a competitor are you right now? And how well are you prepared for fighting someone who’s bigger than you are?

Just like a shopping trip starts with checking the contents of your wallet, so should you check what your own site has to offer. Self-reflection for sites is sometimes called a SWOT analysis.

What’s in a SWOT analysis?

  • Strengths: all the things you are currently good at. For example, your site may have an awesome design that impresses your visitors.
  • Weaknesses: all the things you are supposed to be good at, but are not. Do you notice that users largely ignore your calls-to-action? That is definitely something to worry about.
  • Opportunities: all the things that you could use for your site’s benefit right now or in the near future. Are any big holidays coming soon? They are always a good opportunity to lure in more customers with special offers and juicy discounts.
  • Threats: all the things that are or may become present in the environment and could hurt your site. Threats are external, unlike weaknesses which are innate.

For example, a thorough check might reveal that your site is a charm to use thanks to its efficient design and fast loading speed. But on the other hand, it may lack interesting content that would appeal to users. Or you might find out that your hosting is about to expire and soon you won’t have a website anymore.

The possibilities are endless here. The realities, however, are not. Find out as much as you can about your reality – it will serve as the basis of your SEO strategy.

2. Find your direct competitors

Now we can move on to competitor research. First things first, you need to know who, exactly, you are competing with. Look for sites which:

  • Target the same audience as you;
  • Rank in search engines for your keywords higher than you.

Feel free to ignore the sites which don’t fit this description – they are not your competition. Waste your time on them, and your competitor SEO strategy will become harder for no good reason. Focus only on the pests leeching off of your traffic. Soon, very soon, the tables will turn…

But that’s only after you find them.

To start, boot up the Dangerous Competitors tool in WebCEO.

And click on Settings to begin.

1. Enter your ranking keywords in the Keywords tab.

2. Click on the Search engines tab, then click on the Add a search engine button. In the new popup window, select your target country and language. The tool will find relevant search engines, from which you’ll need to choose those that are relevant to your situation (Google and Google Mobile, most likely). Press Add.

Click on Save, and the Rank Tracker tool will begin searching. Once it’s finished, it will generate a graph and a table.

Look for the websites we determine to have a higher traffic score than you (they will be above you in the table). You should pay them a visit to make sure they actually share a niche with you and are competing for the same users. Once you determine a site is your competitor, find it in the table and click on the flag next to its name. This will automatically add this website as a competitor in Settings.

In Settings/Competitors you can type in other competitors’ URLs. WebCEO will be able to show data for them in its other reports.

One more pro tip: to best hone in on your real competitors, filter your keyword list for words that most directly state what you do. For example: “Cleveland marketing agency” as opposed to “marketing agency” or “Cleveland marketing”.

You can use tags to designate the words that most exactly state the business you are in. In this way you can weed out websites for business journals and college marketing courses or marketing agencies in, say, Cincinnati, all of which are not your competitors.

3. Analyze the user experience on their sites

Okay, you have a list of your competitors. Now let’s start with the easiest part of competitor SEO: visual analysis. Time to spy with your little eye all their weak spots! …Although, it’s more likely you will end up unearthing your own.

What should you do when you visit their sites? Start from their homepages and see where it takes you.

  • Compare their site designs to yours. First impressions matter; users will be more willing to browse a site that’s easy on the eyes. Which of your competitors look better than you and how do they do it? What do they have in the looks department that you don’t?
  • Check how secure they are. Are their sites HTTP or HTTPS? Do they use cookies? Do they redirect you anywhere suspicious or load any dubious popup windows? Or, here’s a simple test you can use as a rule of thumb: would you trust those sites with your own credit card information?
  • Test their loading speed. You can use your browser’s in-built tools like Chrome’s DevTools to measure it, but you should be able to get a good grasp of it even without counting milliseconds. If it’s fast, it’s fast.
  • Test their navigation. Do they have it to begin with? If they do, what pages can you visit from there? Does it link to all the important pages users would need to visit (such as contact information)? Is it easy to navigate on PCs, smartphones and other devices?
  • Check them for intrusive interstitials. Do any ads or banners appear and block the view or otherwise distract visitors from the main content?
  • Check their pricing plans and other terms of use. How do they compare to what you are offering? Between you and them, whom would the users rather choose?
  • Check their calls-to-action. Do they look clickable and compelling? Do they give users what they want in as few steps as possible?

If this brief analysis reveals why your competitors are better than you, don’t get depressed. Sites rise in rankings by changing for the better, and you can do the same after a little brainstorming. Take your time and turn your weaknesses into strengths one by one.

4. Plan your content strategy

Users of Google only care about solutions to their problems. Whether the first thing they see is a featured snippet or an organic result is of no concern to them. They will be fine with either as long as it promises help.

As a site owner, it’s up to you where you want to rank. But if you want traffic, then your solutions must be better and more available than anybody else’s.

In other words, it all boils down to content and how to present it.

How to make your content competitive?

  1. Satisfy user search intent. Anticipate every question, want and pain you can think of – then address them all.
  2. Make your content superior to everything you can find for your keywords on Google’s first page.
  3. Optimize your search snippets to be eye-catching and clickable. This means a readable and uncropped title, description and URL, using power words. Enhance your snippets with structured data.
  4. Optimize your content to be featured at Position Zero.

Next comes the harder and more thankless part: promoting your content.

You will need to find people who link to content like yours, then make them notice you. This is much easier done when you have already spent plenty of time growing your online presence and building a network. Starting fresh will be a pain. Whichever is the case for you, the first step will be the same: making a list of potential backlink donors.

Time for the Competitor Backlink Spy to shine! Look for sites which have linked to your competitors’ content.

Build new links by spying on your competitor backlinks.

Once you have a list of suitable candidates, you can start building backlinks on their sites. Or rather, start trying to. It’s very unlikely that all or even many of them will agree to work with you, but keep doing your best.

To be more specific:

  • Reach out to as many sites as you can. Your success rate is going to be low, so you will need to cast a wide net. It will increase your chances if two or more of your competitors have a link from a particular website, of course.
  • Prepare multiple different email templates for outreach. Don’t send everyone the same text; what if it turns out so bad that you get no backlinks at all? Use a variety of approaches and keep improving.
  • Mention why linking to your site is a good idea. What benefits are there for the donor? For example, your piece of content could be really unique or more in-depth than others on the same topic. Or maybe you found a broken link on their site and your content is a good replacement.

5. Analyze competitors’ keywords

If your competitor has keywords for which they are already ranking high, it’s going to be hard to outrank them for the same keywords. Not impossible, but still hard. You will need to increase your site’s authority significantly for that to work, and only high-DA backlinks can do the trick.

Getting such backlinks should be your goal, but your initial efforts would be better off spent elsewhere. There are easier and faster ways to shorten the distance between you and your competitors. You might even end up overtaking them sooner than you think!

For starters, find out how they are ranking for the keywords you are using yourself. This can be checked in the report called Competitor Rankings by Keyword.

If it turns out you are already outranking your competitors for some of your keywords, that’s great! Of course, it could also mean you should find somebody else to compete against in order to achieve better results. But let’s assume that’s not the case at the moment.

Search the table for the keywords which fulfil both of these conditions:

  • You aren’t ranking well for them;
  • Your competitors aren’t ranking well for them, either.

Why those keywords? Because it’s easier to overtake pages that don’t rank well. If you double-down on those specific keywords and improve your own rankings, you can steal a nice chunk of user traffic your competitors would want for themselves.

Be sure to check the rankings in search engines other than Google, as your competition’s rankings might be weak there as well. You can find this information in a different report: Competitor Rankings by Search Engine.

Another tool you should try is WebCEO’s Competitor Keyword Spy (better known as Spy on Competitors). As the name suggests, this tool shows you the keywords used on your competitors’ sites. What’s the best way to use it?

1. Enter a competing website’s URL and press Search. The tool will show the keywords in a table.

2. Find the keywords you’d like to use yourself. Add them to your keyword basket by clicking on the “+” next to them. If they are already in your basket, that’s good.

3. Go back to the Competitor Rankings by Keyword report. Run a rescan to see the rankings for the keywords you’ve just added.

4. And just like before, find the keywords for which your competitors aren’t ranking well. You already know what to do with them.

6. Analyze their backlinks

It’s hard to imagine competitor SEO analysis without looking up their backlinks. It’s one of the best ways to build your own links, after all – and one of the main reasons to analyze your competitors in the first place.

Allow me to recommend the tool for the job. The name is Spy. Backlink Spy.

Open its Settings and feed it your competitors’ domain names. Press Save, and the tool will generate a table with this information:

  • Pages with each competitor’s backlinks
  • Pages with your own backlinks
  • Each backlink’s Domain Trust Flow
  • Anchor texts
View the data on your competitors' backlinks.

Some of the sites that link to your competitors may already be linking to you as well. So the main point of interest in this table is the backlinks more than one of your competitors have, but you don’t have. It’s also a good idea to check the backlinks sporting the highest Domain Trust Flow. Sort the table by that column and check the sites where your site doesn’t have a backlink.

It also helps to track your progress by marking up the sites you are trying to butter up. The table’s rightmost column is reserved for your own site and its backlinks. Unlike competitor sites, your empty fields aren’t exactly empty; they have dropdown menus where you can associate a status with the current or potential backlink donor. For example, you can choose Rejected if you failed to negotiate a backlink.

Track the results of your link building  in Competitor Backlink Spy.

Be sure to check up on your competitors’ backlinks every now and then. There’s no way to tell when they will get backlinks from more sites you could get for yourself, and you won’t know until you run a check. Use the Scan Schedule feature to have the tool do it for you automatically – for example, once a month.

7. Check their social media activity

It’s arguable how much social media activity helps to boost your rankings. But that doesn’t mean you can just write it off as undeserving of your time. Where social media lacks in supporting your SEO, it shines at building reputations online – and for a brand, reputation is everything.

So if your competitors have pages in social media where they keep in touch with their users, not only do you need to follow their example, you should also watch how they do it. Assuming they are good at it, of course.

Check their social media activity for these things:

  • What kind of content do they post? It could be advertising content on their sites, making announcements, asking for feedback or anything else. If your competitors communicate with their users in a manner that you don’t, take note.
  • How often do they post? This is most often directly tied to how much content they have to share, but not always. The question is, can you match or surpass the frequency of their updates?
  • Do their posts naturally spur you to take some sort of action, such as leave a reply or share? In other words, are their posts engaging? This applies to everything in a post: text, images and calls-to-action where they openly ask you to like, share or buy.
  • How much engagement do they get? Likes, upvotes, shares, retweets, comments – everything counts. These signals demonstrate a post’s ability to provoke a response from users who ignore most of what they find online, so it’s a metric you can trust. Use a tool like Competitor Social Citations to track this metric.

As with your competitors’ actual sites, the purpose of their social media pages’ visual analysis is to figure out what they do better than you do. Seeing with your own eyes what works is the best way to find inspiration and start creating your own high-quality content.

8. Evaluate their online reputation

Of course, checking keyword rankings and site traffic aren’t the only ways to tell if your competitor is good. You don’t even need to touch any SEO tools for that if you just listen to what people say. If you hear things like “They are fantastic, I’m their regular!”, then you can be sure their website is a force to be reckoned with.

So, which one of your rivals is the most popular? If you don’t know yet, or if you want to do a more thorough check, there are lots of ways to find user feedback.

  • Review platforms. User reviews are often very detailed, which is why they are the best way to analyze a brand’s reputation (and why it’s always recommended to get as many positive reviews as you can).
  • Comment sections. If your competitors have these on their sites, it’s also worth checking how they respond to their commenters.
  • Brand mentions. They can be easily tracked with free tools, such as Google Alerts (which will be sent to you by email) or WebCEO’s Web Buzz Monitoring (same as Google Alerts, plus mentions from Twitter).

How does all this help you? Some brands are more popular with their audience than others. Not everybody’s reputation is on the same level – and that is what you are going to exploit. Just like with Google rankings and site traffic, it will be easier to “overtake” competitors whose reputation isn’t that hot.

By making a name for yourself, you will be killing two birds with one stone: you’ll shorten the distance between you and your biggest competitors, and you will leave others in the dust.

9. Engage with their audience

If you aren’t fighting dirty, you aren’t actually trying to win. Strike your competition where they least expect it!

Seriously, you couldn’t think of an easier way to steal your competitors’ audience if you tried. Why wait for them to come to your site when you can make the first move? Find the places where they hang out often and engage with them there, both online and offline:

  • Social media
  • Blogs and forums
  • Review sites
  • Comment sections
  • Networking events

10. Find out what tools and plugins they are using on their sites

Plugins can be found almost everywhere. Why are they so popular? If you are a webmaster, you will likely want to add a few features for your site, but you might lack the time (or knowledge) to code them with your own hands. And from a user’s perspective, plugins often enhance UX, which is another good reason to use them.

So you can expect that your competitors will be relying on plugins themselves. And if they are, it will help you to know:

  • What plugins are your competitors using?
  • What do those plugins do? Do they perform tasks you may want on your own site?
  • Are there better alternatives to those plugins that you could use?

You can use BuiltWith, a free Chrome browser extension, to scan your competitors’ sites for the plugins and tools they use.

Summary

As you can see, competitor SEO is a complex task with a lot of steps. But no matter how hard it can get, the first step is always the same: analyzing your current SEO situation. Overall site quality, rankings, traffic, backlinks and online presence.

So give your site a thorough check now. See how you are doing against your current online competitors – and then find more of them to overcome.

Sign up and find your most dangerous competitors!

The post SEO Competitor Analysis: Moving Up the Food Chain in 10 Steps appeared first on SEO tools & Online Marketing Tips Blog | WebCEO.

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How To Do Link Building by Exploiting Your Competitor Intelligence https://www.webceo.com/blog/link-building-competitor-intelligence/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/link-building-competitor-intelligence/#respond Thu, 20 Sep 2018 14:07:19 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=5735

Two SEO facts that everybody knows: 1. Backlinks from reputable sites help you rank in Google; 2. You can find new link building opportunities by spying on your competitors’ backlinks. If somebody links to sites that share a niche with...

The post How To Do Link Building by Exploiting Your Competitor Intelligence appeared first on SEO tools & Online Marketing Tips Blog | WebCEO.

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Two SEO facts that everybody knows:

1. Backlinks from reputable sites help you rank in Google;

2. You can find new link building opportunities by spying on your competitors’ backlinks.

If somebody links to sites that share a niche with you, they can be persuaded to place a link to your site, too. Sounds easy in theory, right? But once you actually try it, it turns out to be a complete headache. Link building is hard, folks.

“Who cares if it’s hard? I’m motivated to build links and rank high!”

That’s what I love to hear. Motivation is the foundation of success! Don a black cape and put on your mask. A noble thief who wants to steal competitor backlinks needs two things: charm and SEO tools. Let’s go into detail about how to use each.

1. How to Find Competitor Backlinks with SEO Tools

Before you can go rummaging through your competitors’ link profiles, you need to identify your competitors (obviously). If you don’t know them yet, read on! If you do, consider staying here for a little longer. You might learn how to find more competitors – and more backlinks to steal.

The most optimal way is to use an SEO competitor analysis tools, such as WebCEO’s Dangerous Competitors. As the description of the tool says,

“This report shows sites that you compete with on the search engine results pages. It uses the list of your keywords and search engine organic & vertical results (except ads) to find your niche competitors.”

Input your keywords in the tool’s settings and press Save. If you have used the Rank Tracking section in WebCEO before, the keywords will already be there, and you won’t have to open the settings again. You’ll just need to press Rescan.

The report will be made of two parts: a graph and a table. The graph shows how much traffic your competitors get for the same keywords as yours.

Graph displaying your competitors.

The table shows other information, such as the competitors’ total backlinks and the number of ranking keywords that overlap with yours.

Table showing your competitors.

Tip: competitors with a smaller keyword overlap will be easier to beat.

Be warned: not all sites shown in the report will be your direct business competitors. Their services might be very different from yours, but they could still outrank you for your keywords. Choose your competitors from that list wisely – in other words, choose the ones whose audience you want for yourself.

Once you’ve decided on who to compete with, it’s time for a competitor backlink checker to take the stage –  WebCEO’s Competitor Backlink Spy. Enter your competitors’ URLs in the settings and start scanning. Once the report is ready, it will show the pages that link to you and to the competitors.

Competitor backlinks, shown in an SEO competitor analyzer.

Look for the rows where your competitors have ticks, but your site doesn’t. That’s how you can find domains where your competitors have backlinks and where you might be able to build some of your own. The Competitor Backlink Spy report displays the linking domains’ authority as well, so you’ll know if reaching out to them will be worth the effort.

And now you just add your potential backlink sources in an Excel spreadsheet. There! With that, your link building strategy has tangible goals, and your work is cut out for you.

2. How to Ask for Backlinks with a Noble Thief’s Charm

Next comes reaching out to those sites and convincing them to give you a backlink. But how? Unfortunately, there is no failsafe plan that is guaranteed to produce backlinks. But there is a strategy that has helped many people before and may work for you, too.

Step 1: Create excellent content

Bait is often used to catch thieves. Great content is a special kind of bait that works in reverse.

Why does it work? Because people won’t link to just any dubious page. They’ll be ashamed of themselves if they tell their users to go somewhere shoddy. Save your targets from embarrassment and put on your site a great piece of content.

What counts as great?

  • Meaningful: it has a point. If people read it and think “so what?”, it isn’t worthy of a backlink.
  • Valuable: it satisfies the needs of the users who read it. If they want information, it’s there; if they have a problem, you have a solution.
  • Premium quality: it’s even better than what those sites usually link to.

Mind you, even the highest quality doesn’t guarantee your content will be accepted. What can you do to increase your chances? Make your content useful not just for its readers, but also for the person you’re offering it to.

What exactly does it mean?

Suppose they have a broken link pointing to your competitor. You have content similar to what the competitor had on the other side of that link. Your target would certainly like to fix the broken link on their site. If you offer them your content from that angle, you’ll most likely hear a yes.

Or a different scenario: they have a link pointing to an outdated piece of content by your competitor. If you have something that’s more relevant and up-to-date, that link might be changed if you ask. See the pattern? When giving you a backlink solves someone’s problem, you have a very good chance to get that backlink.

This will be reflected in the emails you can send, the examples of which you can read a bit further down.

Step 2: Connect with your target

Some people have been lucky to get a backlink after asking once, despite having never talked before. However, I think you’ll agree that it’s much better to build a cordial relationship before asking. Friends and even mere acquaintances tend to receive consent more often than strangers.

Where can you connect with your future backlink buddies? Anywhere you can freely talk like equals will do. Facebook, Quora and other major social media platforms; comment sections on their websites and on your own, too; any site you can think of works. Chat them up until you feel you are ready for the next step, which is…

Step 3: Reach out and ask

If you never ask, the answer will always be silence. This is where you are put to the test and judged for being worth your salt. Once preparations have been made, it’s time for you to have a shot at asking for a backlink.

Email outreach is a popular option, but not the only one. Any means of sending a private message (for example, via social media and forums) will do. If anything, if you happen to know what channel your backlink buddy uses most often – use that one to send them a message.

Here are a few examples to inspire you:

Example 1

Hello John!

I’ve been looking through your blog for articles about client outreach and really liked (article’s title). Some of its points were exactly what my marketing strategy had been missing. You’re amazing! I can’t thank you enough for your help.

I’ve also noticed that you talked about outreach templates in that article. I happen to have a post on my blog with examples of the best email outreach templates: (link). I’m sure you’ll like it, so feel free to check it out! Your readers may find it helpful if that part had a link to my post.

Keep up the good work with (your website) and your blog.

Sincerely,

Dave

Example 2

Hi Steve!

I’ve been looking through your blog for articles on client outreach and noticed a broken link in (article’s title).

Judging by the context, it used to lead to a resource about outreach templates, and my blog has a post with exactly that: (link). If you find it a good alternative, would you consider linking to me instead? I’m sure it will be up to your standards.

Best regards,

Mary

Example 3

Hey Laura,

I’ve been looking through your blog for articles on SEO and noticed a link pointing to (another site) in your post (title). Their article appears to be outdated: it recommends using obsolete techniques like writing in the <meta keywords> tag and even harmful ones like keyword stuffing.

I happen to have a more up-to-date post on the same subject on my blog, titled (post’s title). Would you consider linking to it instead of the other article? Here’s the link if you are interested: (link).

Best wishes,

Kate

Can you see the key points? Let’s sum them up:

  • Write as you’d write to a person. It sounds like it goes without saying, but it can be harder than you think! Be careful not to write up a cold, impersonal email that reads like an obvious template.
  • Show interest in their work. It’s a nice way to close distance when it’s your first time writing to that person. You won’t instantly graduate from a stranger, but you’ll score some points if you show you are familiar with their website and its content.
  • Make it mutually beneficial. As was said earlier in this post, people like it when the deal isn’t one-sided and benefits them in some way, too. Say what they have to gain by giving you a link.

Be aware, though: not all will accept your offer or even reply. But those who will, no matter how few, will be a tremendous help. So if you want to get more backlinks, you need to cast a really wide web and befriend a lot of people. Turn up your charm up to eleven!

Is your motivation still strong? Then there’s no time to waste. Find your competitors and break into their link profiles. They’ll never see it coming.

How to get backlinks with competitor intelligence

The post How To Do Link Building by Exploiting Your Competitor Intelligence appeared first on SEO tools & Online Marketing Tips Blog | WebCEO.

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3 Best Sources to Mine Topics Your Audience Will Love https://www.webceo.com/blog/3-best-sources-to-mine-topics-your-audience-will-love/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/3-best-sources-to-mine-topics-your-audience-will-love/#comments Tue, 17 Jun 2014 13:21:15 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=1226

When you blog regularly, you see blog post ideas everywhere. Your morning coffee or a walk may inspire you; you can read some interesting facts or notice your ranking changes so you can suggest that a new Google update happened....

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When you blog regularly, you see blog post ideas everywhere. Your morning coffee or a walk may inspire you; you can read some interesting facts or notice your ranking changes so you can suggest that a new Google update happened. Finally you can read an interesting post and share your thoughts on the topic.

However, the times of writing content for the sake of content have gone. Now the content should engage, should attract attention and earn natural links. Web Analytics is here to help you separate the wheat from the chaff.

Your Google Analytics

The most evident way to know what topics your audience searches for is to check what site’s pages get the most visitors.

Log into your Google Analytics account and go to the ‘Behavior’ group of reports. Expand the ‘Site Content’ reports and click on ‘Landing Pages’. Here you will get the list of the pages your visitors landed on. Check the most visited ones and you will know the list of topics your audience wants to read about.

use your Google Analytics to discover hot trends

From the WebCEO Blog Google Analytics, I figured that you are now most interested in the various ways of spying on your competition. Please, move to the next piece of advice.

Your Competitors Activity

If you read our blog on a regular basis, you will know how useful your competitors can be, if you know how to retrieve information about them.

  1. When you read your competitors’ blogs (if you still do not, start immediately!), write down what posts and articles provoke discussions or get the most comments.
  2. Check what types of content your competitors share on social media sites. Pay attention to the posts that get the most likes, shares and comments.

Your Social Media Profiles

I recommend using the new  ‘Social Citations‘ report you can find in the WebCEO Social Metrics tool. This report (available within all WebCEO Plans without limitations) will help you to find out what pages of your site are in posts that get the most Facebook shares, likes and comments, Google +1’s and tweets.

Web CEO Social Citation report

The pages with the most social engagement are the pages your audience love the most. Consider creating more content on the most shareable topics to attract new readers and make your current readers more loyal.

Bonus tip: Funny and outstanding images or other visual content make your posts more sharable and attractive (just be sure to include links to your domain in the posts). Our next blog post will be devoted to the places where you can find data for infographics, charts and other visual content. Do not miss this!

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3 Must-Have Tools to Spy on Your Competitors’ Social Media https://www.webceo.com/blog/3-must-have-tools-to-spy-on-your-competitors-social-media/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/3-must-have-tools-to-spy-on-your-competitors-social-media/#comments Mon, 17 Mar 2014 14:22:49 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=926

Now that online social media has such a strong presence, each and every business should build a complex multiplatform online brand strategy. This strategy should involve fan pages on the most popular social media channels, like Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest,...

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Now that online social media has such a strong presence, each and every business should build a complex multiplatform online brand strategy. This strategy should involve fan pages on the most popular social media channels, like Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest, YouTube etc.

When building a company’s social media profile authority, a deep analysis of your content marketing efforts through the prism of competitive performance is the bottom line.  An analysis of your competitors will help you to build your own successful brand strategy. I have taken for analysis a few social media tools that provide competitive analysis of social media fan pages.  Our targeted platforms are Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. The key metrics that should be taken into consideration while analyzing fan pages are: growth rate, engagement rate, time of posting, frequency of posting/ day, volume of posts/day, the type of post, the length of post (Tip: don’t forget that on Facebook it should be between 50-250 chars, on Twitter – no longer than 140 chars., on LinkedIn – the visible part of the update counts about 250 chars.), the most utilized keywords and hashtags. So let’s overview the main features of some of the free and paid social media analytics tools.

FanpageKarma

Fanpage Karma generates helpful and clear reports on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube(New!) and provides in-depth  performance data insights. It has a user-friendly interface with intuitive site navigation and pop-up hints.

The tool’s features are as follows:

1. Dashboard (click to see a full size image)

1-facebook-fanpage-karma-small
2. Insights on your social profile, including analysis of: content (top posts vs. weakest posts, most engaging keywords and hashtags), post time/type, influencers (influencers of the fan page and fans’ activity).

3. Benchmarking of your company fan page vs. competitors’ (unlimited number of pages to monitor).

2-competitor analysis karma

4. Excel report export (Powerpoint is upcoming).

5. Historical overview of the fan page’s performance.

6. Tagging. This is a really powerful feature that lets you tag the posts of your and your competitors’ pages so you have deeper insights into the post performance due to particular parameters (your own tagging, post types etc.).

Pros:

+ You can compare 2 fan pages (Yours vs. Competitor’s) or you can use FanPageKarma Benchmarking that allows you to generate competitive analysis reports for unlimited page profiles.

+ It is a free tool.

+ The tool has a user-friendly interface with quick access to Facebook, Twitter and YouTube dashboards and Benchmarking.

Cons:

– There are no custom date range settings for Twitter Dashboard and Benchmarking.

Simply Measured

Simply Measured is a multichannel analytical reporting toolset that provides comprehensive insights in the form of charts, tables and calculations. You can monitor, track and analyze all your multiple profile pages up to 12 social media platforms. Simply Measured comes with 13 freebie reports on your social media performance, that you can generate in Excel, PowerPoint and Word. One of these 13 free reports is a Facebook Competitive Analysis that allows you to analyze up to 10 fan pages.

This is how the Facebook Competitive Analysis report looks like in Excel. 

3-simply-measure

Charts have an attractive visual perception and are split into 5 sections.

Competitive leader board – with insights on the best and worst performed accounts

Overview section – demonstrates the most important metrics of the compared profiles.

Engagement on brand posts -shows what the factors are that drive a customer’s engagement with posts.

4-simply-measured-engagement

Community health details – demonstrate the dynamics of engagement of the compared brands.

Content details – reveals the top posts of the brands and its parameters.

Pros:

+ 45 cross platform reports in Excel, PowerPoint and Word (available for paid plans).

+ 13 free reports on the most popular social media profile analysis.

+ Clear and plain charts.

Cons:

– Expensive subscription plans ( the cheapest subscription plan  $500/month.

– No custom date range settings (the last 2 weeks time range is set by default).

– You can generate no more than 2 reports (of one type) in a 24 hour period.

Twitonomy

Twitonomy is a great Twitter analytics tool. It is not only analytical but also a good managing tool that lets you manage your tweets, monitor your (company) account and get insights on your account activity parameters. Here are some features:

Dashboard. You can add users, lists and keywords that you want to keep an eye on.

Tweet analysis. It includes the number of tweets, average tweets per day, average user mentions per day, average links per tweet, hashtags most used, tweets most retweeted, users most mentioned and retweeted and other useful metrics).

5-twitonomy

Mentions & RTs, including your name or brand mentions, users that mentioned you, users that retweeted you. This tab has a map visualization option of your mentions!

Followers and Following.

Lists.

Pros:

+ it is free

+ Intuitive and easy-to-understand tweet analytics

+ Intuitive app interface that allows you to manage tweets (review, reply and retweet) right from the Profile Tweet Analysis tab

Cons:

– There is no option to conduct competitive analysis of multiple Twitter accounts. If you want to analyze competitor profiles you must use the search box within your Profile tab.

– There is no auto save option of the analyzed competitive profiles, the updated page returns you to your own profile analytics.

– There is no custom date range settings within a free plan.

Final Note

I highly recommend analyzing your competitor marketing efforts on a regular basis. I use the following schedule:

Every day I read competitor blogs and social media profiles to be informed about their news and events. Besides I have the WebCEO Web Buzz Monitoring tool set to monitor competitors’ brand names. This helps me to get a buzz list of posts that mention my competitors, and I can react to these posts if necessary and get mentioned there too.

Weekly, I check the competitors’ rankings and traffic. The WebCEO Competitor Metrics are great for this. This action is vital to be sure you are doing well.

Monthly, I compare the competitors’ link profile to the one of my site to know where I can get new links. The Competitor Backlink Spy is also scheduled to run every month.

On a quarterly basis I perform a big competitor analysis. This is a time to analyze the industry market and update the competitors list.

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Be Informed About What Happens Behind Competitor Lines https://www.webceo.com/blog/be-informed-about-what-happens-behind-competitor-lines/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/be-informed-about-what-happens-behind-competitor-lines/#comments Tue, 28 Jan 2014 15:27:07 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=821

It’s hard to have a successful online business without sometimes spying a little on your competitors and their adoption of best-practice marketing tactics. We prefer to call this a competitive analysis. Now you can learn your competitors’ best practices even...

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It’s hard to have a successful online business without sometimes spying a little on your competitors and their adoption of best-practice marketing tactics. We prefer to call this a competitive analysis. Now you can learn your competitors’ best practices even more easily with the help of our newly added Competitor Metrics reports.

First, choose the 3 or 4 sites that you really compete with. These will be the sites you will watch regularly.

The main aim of a competitive analysis is to predict where your competitors may outrank you and fine-tune your marketing strategy to avoid this. The WebCEO Online Competitor Metrics reports provide you with a lof of key information.

Go to the ‘Competitor Rankings’ report, add up to 20 websites you want to monitor the search engines results positions for. With this report you will always be informed about the pages of your site that need to be fine-tuned to outrank your competitors.

Use WebCEO to track your competitors rankings

Then use the ‘Competitor Link Profile’ report to research how well your website is doing compared to your competitors (you can investigate the link profiles of several competing websites at once). Here you will find PageRank data, the number of total backlinks, the diversity of linking domains, the number of .GOV and .EDU domains links and nofollow links that pass no link juice to the linked pages.

Research your competitors backlink profiles with WebCEO

Every marketer’s dream is to know how many customers the competitors have. No one can tell you, however the WebCEO Online ‘Competitor Traffic Overview’ report can help you to analyze your competitors’ traffic and estimate how many prospects they may get over a given time period.

Estimate how many prospects your competitors get

Do not forget that researching your competitors’ backlink profiles is a great way to earn those same backlinks for your website. The WebCEO Competitor Backlink Spy tool helps you to find who links to your competitors but do not yet link to your site. A simple email or tweet can get you listed at these sites as well.

WebCEO Online provides you with an easy way to analyze your competitors’ social activity. Use the Web Buzz Monitoring tool to monitor important keywords as well as your and competitors’ brand names. The ‘Social tracker’ report allows you to analyze your competitors’ activities on Facebook, Google+ and Twitter and to, thereby, set realistic social benchmarks for your brand.

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Professional Guide to SEO Automation https://www.webceo.com/blog/professional-guide-to-seo-automation/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/professional-guide-to-seo-automation/#comments Tue, 12 Nov 2013 16:17:03 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=706

The first and the most important task for a professional Internet marketer is to choose tools that improve workflow. SEO task automation helps to save the most finite resource you have – your time. When you know how to automate...

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The first and the most important task for a professional Internet marketer is to choose tools that improve workflow. SEO task automation helps to save the most finite resource you have – your time. When you know how to automate your work, you will spend less time on routines and instead focus on strategic development and business analysis.

Tasks that once demanded hours of your time, such as auditing landing pages for on-page optimization, examining backlink profile quality or checking your site for duplicate descriptions and titles, now can be done in a few minutes. You can use the saved time to promote your business via viral campaigns, fresh content and social media.

As you know, Internet marketing campaigns require constant maintenance. You should always carefully monitor your site performance and adjust your content strategy accordingly. WebCEO can generate automated reports based on metrics that matter to ROI.

You can delegate powerful but repetitive SEO tasks to WebCEO; this gives you more time to focus on revenue-based SEO strategy and development.

1. Site Quality Audit.

Search engines now pay a lot of attention to the technical quality of your website. We all know that it is hard to keep your website in order manually. When your site has more than 10 pages, it is hard to keep your site free of broken links, duplicate titles and descriptions, keyword stuffing and other mistakes search engines may penalize you for.

webceo-screenshot-seo-audit

The easiest way to save your website from all the mistakes that decrease your website quality and visibility is to use the Web CEO Online Site Auditor. It provides you with a “General SE Optimization” report, which helps you to get rid of duplicate META tags on your pages, checks your XML sitemap and robots.txt file and makes sure you use H1 headings in a proper way.

Tip: We recommend scheduling monthly site audits to be sure your website is free of quality errors and optimization issues.

2. Your Website’s Rankings.

Site rankings are the easiest way to track SEO success. We know that the first position in Google gets 33% of search traffic, while the tenth gets only 2%. You should monitor your site’s positions for the keywords your site is optimized for.

webceo-screenshot-rank-check

Remember that Google now provides “Universal Search” (blended results) where different types of results are blended together. With the WebCEO Rank Checker you can monitor your site’s positions in all vertical result silos (images, places, videos, news and shopping).

Tip: Go to the WebCEO Rank Checker settings and check “Visits brought by search engines” on the Display tab. This option will help you to estimate how your traffic will increase when you improve your site’s rankings.

Schedule WebCEO to check your site’s rankings weekly, so you can react to any changes as soon as possible.

3. Competitor Metrics.

Competitive analysis gives you ideas on how to fine-tune your online marketing to get more profit. You will need to spy on your competition to understand why your website may be outranked by them.

The WebCEO Backlink Quality Checker: Competitor Metrics

The ‘Competitor Metrics’ report of the WebCEO Backlink Quality Checker tool shows how well your website is doing compared to your competitors. The PageRank of a competitor’s home page is not always a completely accurate measure of good optimization, however if your competition is two or three PageRank numbers ahead of you, it might be time to do some optimization work.

Tip: Add up to 4 competitors and schedule the ‘Competitor Metrics’ report to run automatically every month so you will be alerted if your competitors have done some great optimization.

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Build Your Social Media Campaign with the help of Your Competitors https://www.webceo.com/blog/build-your-social-media-campaign-with-the-help-of-your-competitors/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/build-your-social-media-campaign-with-the-help-of-your-competitors/#comments Thu, 17 Oct 2013 11:09:34 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=663

One of the best ways to help develop a social media strategy for your brand is to research what your competitors are doing. Performing a social media competitive analysis is an essential part of your social media success. You should...

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One of the best ways to help develop a social media strategy for your brand is to research what your competitors are doing. Performing a social media competitive analysis is an essential part of your social media success. You should analyze your competitors’ activities to set realistic benchmarks for your brand.

social-media-competitors

Check what social networks your competitors use. Thy may differ a lot depending on the industry you are in. While Pinterest may be great for a florist or an interior design company, it might be less useful if you are in engineering. Now when you have a list of the social media profiles of your competitors you can start your competitive analysis.

1. Check how often your competitors post.

Yes, this is a very manual process. However it’s really important to know how many times they posted unique content during the last month. This will help you to craft your own schedule.

2. Learn what type of content is popular with your targeted audience.

By looking at what type of content your competitors tend to post you can measure how successful the various mediums are in terms of fan involvement and engagement. Does the audience like photos and videos? Is it a good idea to repost other brands’ content? Should you use hashtags? Answer these questions to better understand what types of content will be helpful for your marketing.

3. Investigate your competitors’ social engagement.

Analyze the number of followers your competitors have. This will show how popular they are and how big their online community is.  While you may not be able to see the changes in social media numbers, you can see trends very clearly.

4. Monitor your competitors’ online reputation.

You should know what is said about your competitors across the web. This helps you to react immediately and fine-tune your social media marketing. For example, if you detect a weakness that happens to be a strength for you, you may consider writing and publishing more content that explains how good you are with that aspect of your business.

A great way to monitor your competition is to use the Web CEO Social Buzz tool. Simply type your competitors’ brand names into the tool and get everyday updates showing freshly indexed content mentioning them.

monitor your social activity with webceo

Look through the found posts and react if appropriate. Besides you can favorite posts you commented on so you can return to them later and see what new comments were added.

When you collect all the data and compare it to your own metrics, you will be able to adjust your own social media campaigns to outperform your competitors. By looking at how your target consumers communicate with your competitors, you will get insights on how to effectively interact with them through social networks.

Remember that your competitors are changing and improving all the time.  They will be adjusting their approach and updating their campaigns in order to try to improve results. That is why your competitive analysis should be an ongoing process. It’s not something that you can do once and then forget about.

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How to Build Backlinks with the Help of Your Competitors https://www.webceo.com/blog/how-to-build-backlinks-with-the-help-of-your-competitors/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/how-to-build-backlinks-with-the-help-of-your-competitors/#comments Tue, 15 Oct 2013 14:29:24 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=656

As you know, understanding your competitive position in search results is extremely important. Today we explain how your competitors may help you build links. Researching your competitors’ backlink profiles is a great way to earn those same backlinks for your...

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As you know, understanding your competitive position in search results is extremely important. Today we explain how your competitors may help you build links.

seo-cartoon-competitors

Researching your competitors’ backlink profiles is a great way to earn those same backlinks for your website. This is a good idea for two reasons: you will get more backlinks and you will help Google to understand your website’s theme, that you are, in fact, a competitor of what might be a well-ranked site.

Before you start your backlink campaign, research how your competitors are doing. Go to the WebCEO Backlink Quality Checker and add up to 4 competitors to check their metrics.

compare-metrics-webceo

Your home page PageRank will give you an idea of how well your website is doing compared to your competitors. It’s not always completely accurate, but if your competition is two or three PageRank numbers ahead of you, it might be time to do some optimization work.

The number of total backlinks will estimate how much work is needed to outrank your competition. Remember that, from the Google point of view, it is better to have more linking domains. Having a lot of linking domains diversity and lots of links from .GOV and .EDU domains shows that your website is authoritative. Nofollow links may bring you traffic, but they do not pass link juice to your pages.

Now, when you can estimate how many backlinks of high quality you need, you can go and get them. The WebCEO Competitor Backlink Spy will help you to investigate who links to your competitors.

webceo_competitor-backlink-spy

Carefully investigate the pages that link to your competitors’ websites but do not have links to your site. It’s quite possible that you can get links there too. Start from the pages that have high Google PR and link to two or more competitors. They are the most helpful because they’re more likely to want to link to your page as well.

Even if you are not going to approach the same sites that your competitors clearly have, this process will reveal the types of sites you may want to approach.

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Why You Should Start Spying on Your Competition Right Now https://www.webceo.com/blog/why-you-should-start-spying-on-your-competition-right-now/ https://www.webceo.com/blog/why-you-should-start-spying-on-your-competition-right-now/#comments Wed, 09 Oct 2013 13:08:14 +0000 https://www.webceo.com/blog/?p=640

It is no secret that the online business world changes quickly. If you are growing a successful web business, you should understand why customers choose you; why you are better than your competition. The idea that you are missing something...

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It is no secret that the online business world changes quickly. If you are growing a successful web business, you should understand why customers choose you; why you are better than your competition.

The idea that you are missing something in your marketing mix is a driving force for competitive analysis. Take the time to analyze your competition in order to best show your consumers that they are right in choosing you over that competition. Today prospects choose you according to an array of reasons: your product, pricing, support, your website’s design, the message you deliver. It rarely has to do with pricing alone.

Competitive analyses give you information you can use to differentiate yourself from others in the marketplace. Research your competitors’ marketing and use this information to fine-tune your marketing plan and get more profit.

spy on competition cartoon

Where to start from

To start a competitive analysis you will need to know who your competitors are. This may seem too self-evident; however you should carefully choose your REAL competitors. Think about your target audience. What do they need? What keywords will they use? Whom would you choose if you had the same needs? Answer these questions and use them as the starting point for analyzing your competitors and developing your competitive marketing strategy.

Make a list with all the competitor sites you can find. Then choose the 5 you really compete with. First of all, follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Google+ (or other social networks that are important in your industry), subscribe to their corporate blog via RSS. Now you will be informed about all their news and will be ready to take actions.

The second step of your competitive analysis is to understand why your website may be outranked by the competitors. This step will help you to improve your online marketing strategy. We will show how to do this in our next blog post. Now go and find out about your real competitors!

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