Monday 27 April 2015

The 4-Step Slam Dunk Process That Generated 140,000 FREE Leads From YouTube

January 20th, 2015 by Adam Linkenauger


blog_Fuel
How cool would it be to gain 140,000 leads (email subscribers) to fuel your business?
How much cooler would it be if you could do it for free?
I’m about to reveal the EXACT 4 step process I’ve used to do exactly that to build a business in the basketball training niche.
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The opportunity is HUGE on YouTube as it’s a fairly underutilized and untapped platform.
Organic traffic on YouTube is different than other platforms like Facebook, it LASTS for months and years.
This channel is in the basketball training niche and it’s growing daily.
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Leads turn into sales, and there isn’t anything healthier for your business than making the cash register ring… (especially if the leads are FREE)!
The strategy of generating organic traffic (and free leads) from YouTube took me 3 years to perfect and I’ve documented it step-by-step.
This system can be used in any market where content can be created…
If you follow these steps, you will see a significant spike in traffic from YouTube in 30-60 days, you just have to stick with it and be consistent.

1. Game Planning: YouTube Keyword Research

As marketers, our job is to provide a solution to a pain point for a market.
For example, athletes may search “How to jump higher” or “How to dunk”.
These potential customers are searching for answers to their problems, and it’s our job as marketers not to rely on them to come to us, but instead, meet them at their problem and provide a solution.
First, write down the broad subject of what your business is all about.
For example, in our business, which teaches athletes how to become better basketball players, I’d write:
Basketball Training
Next, I want you to write down this question:
If you surveyed 100 ideal customers and asked:
“What would you type into Google or YouTube to improve at [PROBLEM YOUR BUSINESS SOLVES]?”
What would the 5 most likely answers be?
Here’s mine…
Subject: Basketball Training
  • Basketball Training
  • How to get better at basketball
  • How to dribble a basketball
  • How to shoot a basketball
  • How do I jump higher
What would your target market type into Google/YouTube when looking for the solution to their pain point?
Write out the top 5 answers (or as many as you can come up with).
Next, I want you to remove “How to” or any added words that aren’t associated with the “keyword” that describes what your customer needs help with.
  • Basketball Training
  • How to get better at basketball
  • How to dribble a basketball
  • How to shoot a basketball
  • How do I jump higher
So the new list would look like:
1. Basketball Training
2. Get Better at Basketball
3. Dribble a Basketball
4. Shoot a Basketball
5. Jump higher
These 5 keywords from your list are called your “Bracelet Keywords”.
Next, take your first bracelet keyword, and go directly to YouTube.
Begin to type in your first bracelet keyword, leaving the last 2 letters off the end of the spelling like so:
Youtube-strategy-img4
As you type, you’ll notice an automated list of “recommendations” below the search bar.
This is called the “Google Autocomplete” function. This function offers a prediction of what you are searching for based on the popularity of previous user searches.
Pretty cool, right?
Next, make a list of all of the Autocomplete recommendations that your market is searching for:
Youtube-strategy-img5
Go through your 5 Bracelet Words, and make a list of all of the recommended autocomplete keywords you were given. You can expect between 35-45 solid keywords that your market is clearly searching for.
Each of the keywords are essentially DONE FOR YOU titles for videos. You’ll want to do a video for every single term you find.
Once you shoot a video, and begin the upload process, be sure to include the keyword in…
  • The headline
  • description
  • tags of the video
… to zero in and target people searching for this exact term.
Here’s one of our videos…
YouTube SEO

2. Rule Change: Great YouTube Content is Worth 3 Points

In early 2014, YouTube made an algorithm switch that based video suggestion on watch time and no longer on videos that received the most clicks early.
With this massive algorithm shift, YouTube leveled the playing ground for people like us to compete with larger channels, businesses, and brands.
The old algorithm awarded channels who sent large amounts of traffic to a new video, giving it a higher ranking in their search engines.
But now, it’s no longer a “traffic competition”, but a content competition.
Simply put, if you provide quality content on a consistent basis, you WILL get traffic because your “Watch Time” will out-perform your competitors!
But how do you provide quality content that you know your market will enjoy?
First: Focus on ONE specific need in each video.
For example, if I was making a video from my list of charm keywords for “Basketball training for beginners”, I’d speak directly on the subject of basketball training for beginners. That way, when people searched “basketball training for beginners” and clicked my video, the content will be completely congruent to what they are searching for, therefore, increasing their watch time.
Second: Video length plays a massive role. Your videos should be just long enough to provide value but short enough to keep the viewers attention for the length of the video.
Videos around 3 minutes in length are long enough to provide value and content, but short enough to not lose viewer interest. I recommend each video targets a specific tip, trick, or technique.
In terms of video editing, don’t over complicate it. Some of our best videos that continue to bring us thousands of leads a month were shot on an iPhone.
The keys are consistency and congruency.
If you can only post once a week, stick to that, if you can post three videos a week, even better. Determine the days of the week that you’re going to post your videos (ex. Monday, Wednesday, Friday) and stick to it.
(You’ll be hearing a ton about this from me next month at Traffic & Conversion Summit 2015 in San Diego. Hope to see you there!)

Digital Marketer Lab Member Extra

Access your ‘YouTube Guide to In-Stream Ads’ Execution Plan in Digital Marketer Lab.
Follow this guide to generate leads using YouTube In-Stream ads.

3. Scoreboard: How To Turn YouTube Views Into Leads

If you aren’t familiar with the term “Annotation”, they are described by YouTube as:
“Clickable text overlays on YouTube videos. Annotations are used to boost engagement, give more information, and aid in navigation.”
Youtube-strategy-img6
I refer to them as “Clickable Billboards” in your videos to direct viewers to take a specific action.
Annotations are what make YouTube marketing so effective. With clickable annotations you can ask your viewers to take a number of actions to help your channel and business grow.
Some of my favorite annotations are:
  • Click here to receive a free gift. (This is how we grow our mailing list.)
  • Click here to subscribe to our channel for free training.
  • Like or comment on this video and tell us what videos you’d like us to make in the future.
To set up an annotation, simply visit the video page once uploaded, and click on the “Annotation” button under the video!
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Inside the Annotations Dashboard you will be able to pick what type of annotation you’d like to use, the text on the annotation, when you’d like to show your annotation inside of the video, and even choose the color and font size.
Annotation “Links” include the ability to send viewers to other videos, playlists, have them subscribe to your channel, and most importantly, visit an associated website. This means if people click your annotation, they will actually leave YouTube and visit your website or landing page.
If you are new to YouTube, or have not yet set up an “Associated Website”, you will need to do so in order to allow “clickable annotations” to your website.
Visit your “Creator Studio” under your profile picture in the top right:
Youtube-strategy-img8
Then select “Channel” from the dashboard on the left. Scroll down, and you’ll find a Feature entitled “External Annotations”, if the “Status” light isn’t green, then click “Learn More” for step-by-step instructions on setting up external annotations to your associated website!
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You only need to connect your main domain to YouTube, as all pages under that domain will be accepted as an associated website.
Two tips for optimizing your annotations to generate the most:
  • “10 in and 10 out rule”: You only show annotations in the first 10% of the video, and the last 10% of the video. So if a video is 2 minutes, or 120 seconds long, we’d show an annotation during the first 12 seconds, and the last 12 seconds. As the video lengthens or shortens, so do our annotations. This allows the viewer plenty of time to take action if they choose, but our annotations take us only 20% of the entire video, allowing the viewer to still enjoy the content.
  • “Rule of ONE”: Only one annotation is displayed at a time. Don’t make the mistake of asking the viewer to do more than one action at a time. I recommend that you offer a reason for your viewer to click your annotation and visit your website (like a free gift or consultation) during every video, as well as the ability to subscribe to your channel. This will drive traffic to your website and leads into your business, but also allow for channel growth, which will increase your organic traffic reach.

4. 4th Quarter: Give a Strong Call To Action

At the end of each video, we provide verbal calls to action that instruct the viewer to take specific actions.
Verbal CTAs are extremely powerful in regards to the growth of your channel, and turning views into leads.
If you tell viewers to complete an action, they are much more likely to do so.
I recommend during the last 10% of the video, you provide a verbal CTA to subscribe to the channel by clicking the “Subscribe” button on your video.
Then, tell them to “like” and comment on your video, and ask the question: “What else would you like me to show you how to do?”
By asking the viewer what else they’d like to learn from you, you’ll discover their true pain points, and ideal videos to create, while increasing your video engagement. This is a powerful market research technique.
Your last CTA in every video, should be to click your lead generation annotation. By combining a visual annotation offering something free with a verbal command, you will see a massive increase in clicks per viewers.
Now that I’ve explained our 4-step process for generating FREE leads from YouTube, it’s time for you take action!
Remember, it takes consistency to implement this process but is well worth the high quality leads you’ll generate for your business.
The opportunity on YouTube is incredible, don’t miss out on your chance to add another high quality traffic source to your business.


http://www.digitalmarketer.com/free-leads-from-youtube/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=ContentDistribution

Monday 20 April 2015

3 Metrics Smart Marketers Use To Dominate a Market

February 12th, 2015 by Dave Lavinsky

blogggy
“He who can spend the most to acquire a customer, wins.”
Each of the high-impact metrics I’m going to share with you today do just that.  They allow you to measure how much you can spend to acquire customers.
These are the kind of metrics that, if you track them and improve upon them, allow you to dominate a market.
And none is more critical than the first…

Metric 1 – Lead Conversion Rate (LCR)

Sure — you’re tracking NUMBER OF NEW LEADS.
But are you tracking the more important metric?  The Lead Conversion Rate, or the rate at which leads convert into paying customers.

Why Should You Care?

Let’s say you get 100 leads per day and your lead conversion rate is 10%. Thus, you’re getting 10 new customers per day. Conversely, your competitor is getting half the leads (50 per day), but has a 30% Lead Conversion Rate.
In this case, your competitor is getting 15 new sales/day to your 10 (and the competitor will likely have less advertising cost because they only needed to acquire half the leads to get more customers).
By increasing your lead to sale conversion rates, your profits grow dramatically since revenue rises sharply while your advertising costs stay the same.
In other words, you can now spend more to acquire MORE customers.

What Does It Look Like?

The formula for Lead Conversion Rate is…
Number of Sales / Number of Leads
Track-5-Metrics1

Take Action

Look at your processes and funnel AFTER you capture the lead.

Metric 2 – Contribution Margin (CM)

Contribution Margin is perhaps the single most important metric you must track as a digital marketer.
Contribution Margin is an accounting metric that equals…
Sales – Variable Costs
These variable costs can include:
  • Advertising costs
  • Cost of goods sold
  • Affiliate commissions
  • Sales commissions
…amongst other things.

What Does It Look Like?

If you’re selling educational DVDs online, the formula would equal your sales minus the cost of…
  • manufacturing/shipping the DVDs,
  • fees paid to affiliates,
  • advertising costs incurred with Google AdWords and Facebook ads,
  • sales team commissions if applicable, and
  • refunds processed.
Below is a sample Contribution Margin chart.
Important: if your business does lots of product launches, you may want to compare your Contribution Margin on a quarterly instead of a monthly basis, as monthly margins may be exaggerated by launches.
Track-5-Metrics2

Why Should You Care?

As a digital marketer it’s easy to increase your Facebook ad budget, for example, and see your sales soar. Or get affiliates to promote your product by offering high commissions.
The issue in taking such actions is that you often decrease your Contribution Margin (and profits) even though sales increase.

Take Action

To improve your Contribution Margin, make sure you’re not adding less profitable sales as you grow.
For instance, if the commissions or advertising costs you’re paying per new sale are too high, your Contribution Margin may decline. Assess new sales opportunities to make sure they’re profitable.

Metric 3 – Earnings Per Click (EPC) [aka Revenue Per Visitor]

Ok… I saved the best for last.
The formula for EPC is simple…
Sales / Clicks
Last year at Traffic and Conversion Summit I did a quick 3-minute video talking about the ONE metric you should be tracking.  Which metric did I choose?  You guessed it… EPC or Revenue Per Visitor.
Here it is…

Metrics, Metrics, Metrics

Start tracking these metrics and use them to build a business that is both willing and able to spend more to acquire customers.


http://www.digitalmarketer.com/smart-metrics-analytics/

Friday 17 April 2015

Find My Market: How to Choose The Right Traffic Source For Your Market


trafficstore


Here’s a shocker…
One traffic source does NOT fit all.
Raise your hand if you’ve heard this before…
“The first thing you need to do is find your market.”
But how do you actually get that done?  I’m going to share how I go about finding my market.
But first you need to know…

How to Fail on the Internet

Every business speaks to a different audience. You must run traffic on the platforms where YOUR market is “hanging out”.
If you craft the perfect marketing message but then fail to put it in front of the right audience, your entire campaign will fail.
For example…
Trying to sell Apple accessories using Google display ads on a blog about PC’s would end in disaster.
You know… the proverbial, “You can’t sell ice to an Eskimo.”

But the strategy remains the same…

Conceptual traffic strategies such as “The Pixel Process” or Boomerang Retargeting are applicable no matter what market you’re in.
Those strategies are applicable across all traffic sources.
To learn more about these universal laws of traffic, read these articles…
But traffic is a commodity.  A click is a click.
We view traffic like a water faucet.  When we want some, we turn it on.
When we want some, we go to the “Traffic Store” and buy it.

But which “Traffic Store” is right for you?

You go to buy traffic when you have an offer that you feel is appealing to a certain market.
You buy traffic where that market is hanging out so that YOU can get in front of them.
One of the biggest questions we get from members in Digital Marketer Lab is, “Where should I start running traffic?
Great question! I had the same question when I started running traffic.
For most situations, I recommend starting with Facebook because…
  • The ad platform is easy to use. (<< This is important, especially if you’re a traffic newbie.)
  • The targeting options are insane.  With the number of targeting options at your disposal on Facebook – you can find your target market easily.
  • Facebook has 1.3 billion users; there is a lot of room for scale on the platform.
But Facebook isn’t for everyone. Facebook has started cracking down and banning advertisers. Markets such as dating or weight loss just can’t advertise on Facebook.
So now I answer this question with a question…
(Want to download all of our free resources? Click here to get the Digital Marketing tool box.)
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“Where is your market?”

If you’re looking to buy traffic, you want to do so from a source that will help you reach your market.
Unfortunately, there isn’t an easy answer to this. I haven’t found a tool that tells you which platform to use to reach a specific market (if you have one, please let me know in the comments)
It takes research. It takes time.
It takes thought.
But, the research couldn’t be more important.
Again, if you craft the perfect marketing message but then fail to put it in front of the right audience, your campaign will fail.
So how do you find your market?
First, you need to think about WHO your market is …

What’s their age, gender, income?

Websites like Twitter, Pinterest, YouTube, etc. have aggregated millions of users — but each platform has slightly different demographics.
This broad demographic information will help you decide on a platform.
More specific information such as…
  • What are their hobbies?
  • What TV shows do they watch?
  • What authority figures do they follow?
  • What books do they read?.
… can be used to target your audience once you’ve decided on a platform.
For example, here’s how to find your market on Facebook.
We like to start with Alexa.  This tool will give you demographic data on websites around the web.
Let’s start with Pinterest:
traffic-weapon-1
Not surprisingly, Pinterest is WAY above average in terms of visits from Females.
Pinterest is a wonderful platform to run traffic in the craft, clothing, make up, and anything e-commerce or female focused.
traffic-weapon-2
Check out this research data from PewResearchCenter on Facebook…
traffic-weapon-3
“Fully 71% of online adults use Facebook, a proportion unchanged from August 2013. Usage among seniors continues to increase. Some 56% of internet users ages 65 and older now use Facebook, up from 45% who did so in late 2013 and 35% who did so in late 2012. Women are also particularly likely to use Facebook compared with men, a trend that continues from prior years.”
(Facebook is specifically great for reaching older demographics that have SPENDING power).
YouTube, like Facebook, have a large and diverse user base with over 1 billion people visiting YouTube every month.
Let’s take a look at LinkedIn…
traffic-weapon-4
“The site (LinkedIn) continues to be particularly popular among college graduates, those in higher-income households and the employed (although the increase in usage by those who are not employed to 21% from 12% in 2013 is notable).
(LinkedIn is especially powerful for reaching the professional market, or running B2B traffic).
You get the gist! Research must be done to ensure your running traffic on the correct platform. It may sound basic, but it really is the FIRST step to running successful traffic campaigns.

We like to shop first at the big “traffic stores”…

There are
hundreds thousands of traffic sources to choose from but we like to stick to the big stores because…
  • There is big volume and the ability to scale
  • The ad interfaces are easier to use
  • The targeting is (usually) better
Here’s a matrix of the big traffic sources and when to consider using them…
Screenshot 2015-03-25 10.09.16
We have resources on using most of these big “traffic stores” for you on our blog…

YouTube

Facebook 

LinkedIn

Google

Twitter

Dedicated Email Drops

It’s the BIGGEST issue we find when traffic campaigns fail… running traffic on a platform where your market isn’t present.
We might shop at the big “traffic stores” first but we’re always experimenting with smaller, niche traffic platorms.  So, if a traffic source doesn’t seem conventional, or it’s not what the industry is talking about at the moment – that’s OK!
Test it out.
The important thing is that you find your market online.
Have questions? Just getting started? Let’s talk about it in the comments section.
(Don’t forget to download all of our free resources! Click here to get the Digital Marketing tool box.)
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Thursday 16 April 2015

25 Sneaky Online Tools and Gadgets to Help You Spy on Your Competitors

Even before you entered into the world of “business”, you were watching your competition. Whether it was in a classroom or on a sports team, you not only wanted to keep up, you wanted to know where the marker was set so you could go one step further. It was about finding new opportunities and setting new goals based on someone you aspired to beat.

At this time, when search is so important and detailed, and the Internet has grown so extensively, you have tons of different factors to consider when spying on your competition. This is where marketing tools come into play.
In many cases, tools that help you monitor your own web performance also can help you gather data on your competition. So, you might be using some of these tools already, without using the features that help you evaluate your competitors. Here are some of the best tools out there:

1. Google Alerts – a tool for monitoring mentions

This is a very simple and easy-to-use tool that will send reports right to your inbox. If you want to know every single time your competitor is mentioned online, whether as a link or simply a mention, you’ll get that report. You can monitor keywords as well. It’s up to you what you want to track.
google alerts
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Get competitors’ backlinks
  • Monitor social (or other website) mentions of your company
  • Monitor keyword mentions
Price: Free

2. SocialMention – a tool for monitoring mentions

This tool has lots of cool features that focus on blogs, video, and social (all the “cool” stuff). You enter in a search term, either a keyword or a company, and the tool will tell you what’s being said about that term across blogs and social platforms. You can see how many times and how often it’s mentioned and you even can subscribe to an RSS feed for that term, so you never miss a beat.
social mention
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Monitor and track keyword mentions
  • Monitor company mentions
  • Cross-analyze what is being said across different social networks
Price: Free

3. Topsy – a tool for social media

This is a tool that’s all about Twitter. You can look up your competitors’ tweets all the way back to 2006 (although you surely won’t need to go back more than a few months), and get free information when you type in a site. You can see how many tweets that company had, a list of those tweets, and which tweets were influential. Feel free to filter and get whatever information you need.
topsy
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • View Twitter data of competitors
Price: This is a tool where the PRO version might be best. Although you can get the information discussed above for free right away, the PRO version gives you real-time results and better reports. The PRO account is $12,000 annually with unlimited data and email support.

4. Marketing Grader – a tool for monitoring mentions

This is a cool tool because it gives each of your competitors an overall score based on social media activity, blogging success, SEO, and lead generation. It’s fun to see if their score fluctuates and then to notice if your score does the same.
market grader
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Monitor social activity of competitors
  • Monitor blogging and SEO success of competitors
  • Monitor lead generation success of competitors
Price: Free from HubSpot

5. Competitive Research & Keyword Research Gadget

This is a really cool tool because you can place it right on your site and then get information about your competitors all in one place. In other words, it’s more of a “gadget” than a tool, meaning it’s a little button you can use to find information using another competitive analysis tool (which the installation will give you).
seo book tools
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Place the tool on your site for easy access
  • Gather information on your competitors in one place
  • Use it in conjunction with another tool of your choice
Price: Free

6. InfiniGraph – a tool for social media

This tool tracks what is trending in your social media circles by focusing on your specific industry. The idea behind this tool is that you “use the power of your audience to know what content and brands are trending with them.” This is a tool that can be used as much for your company as for your competitive analysis.
infinigraph
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Track social media trends in your industry
  • Track social trends of your competitors
  • Obtain insight into your audience
Price: Free

7. Google Keyword Planner – a tool for keywords

Formerly the Google Keyword Tool and Traffic Estimator, this tool seems to have it all. Although it doesn’t focus specifically on competitor analysis (it’s more focused on your own website), finding competitor data is one feature of the tool. Because it’s from Google, it’s considered one of the best out there.
google adwords
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Find competitor keyword data (paid and organic)
  • Monitor your own website as well as those of your competitors
Price: You need to sign up for a free AdWords account to access the tool

8. Instapaper – a tool for organization

This is a simple tool that allows you to save web pages for later to read on your computer, mobile phone, or even Kindle. Once you sign up for an account (which takes just a few minutes), you can add the bookmarklet to your bookmark bar to keep things easy. When it comes to spying on your competition, it’s incredibly helpful to know who your competition is, first and foremost, and this tool will help.
instapaper
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Save webpages to read later
  • Add a bookmarklet to keep your content organized
  • Visit competitor sites and save content that might be of use to you
Price: Free

9. Monitor Backlinks – A tool for keywords

This tool is new on the scene, but it’s something I’ve recently tried and really enjoyed. This is another company with great customer service, and you can follow different competitors’ backlinks and have them sent straight to your inbox, with a description of which are the highest domains, which are the lowest, and whether or not they are dofollow or nofollow. You have a dashboard you can look at and compare your results, but I like to use it primarily to look at links my competitors are earning.
monitor backlinks
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Send competitor backlinks to your inbox
  • Analyze the highest and lowest domains of the links of your competitors
  • Get a good picture of links that are nofollow vs. dofollow
  • Compare your results with competitors thanks to the dashboard
  • Find new link-building opportunities
Price: The price here depends completely on how many domains you want to manage. If you want to manage only 2, it is $19.00/month, 5 is a Plus plan for $49.99/month, 10 is a Professional plan for $99.90/month, and anything more is a custom plan which you would discuss with the company to determine a price.

10. SEMRush – a tool for keywords

This definitely is one of my favorite tools because it specializes in competitor data. You can visit the homepage and type in a competitor’s website (completely free) and immediately get information regarding organic keywords and rank, ad keywords, and traffic. The best part: it all comes to you in a graphic format.
semrush
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Get organic keywords and ranks of competitors
  • Get ad keywords and traffic numbers of competitors
  • Look at data in a graphic format
Price: You can get a large amount of information right on the homepage search bar. (Try it out yourself and you’ll see in less than three seconds.) If you want some really detailed data, you can upgrade for $69.95/month.

11. SpyFu – a tool for keyword and ad monitoring

This is an easy-to-use tool that lets you know which keywords your competitors are targeting, both in organic search and in AdWords. You simply type in your competitor and you can download an entire list of these keywords.
spyfu
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Obtain a list of keywords your competitors are targeting for AdWords
  • Obtain a list of keywords your competitors are targeting in organic search
Price: The Basic plan is $79/month, the Professional plan is $139/month, and the Agency plan is $999/month.

12. Website Review from WooRank – a little bit of everything

This is a tool that has competitor data as just a small section of all it can do. You create your project, and then it will help you track and optimize your website based on the results of that project. If you want to spy on competitors, that’s an option.
woo rank
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Create projects to track
  • Optimize your website based on project results
  • Spy on your competitors as a potential project
Price: For agencies, they recommend the Premium plan for $149/month. For Webmasters, they recommend the PRO plan (only 1 project) for $49/month. You can start with a free trial.

13. SpyOnWeb

This is a very popular tool because it’s so easy to use. With this tool, you enter a URL, Google AdSense or Google Analytics code, or IP address to find out what resources belong to the same owner. In other words, when you type in a domain, you get results for all of the different IP addresses and then a list of domains that have that same IP address (in some cases a site will have more than one IP address).
spyonweb
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Discover the different IP addresses to find domain information
Price: Free

14. SimilarWeb – a tool for web rankings

This is a tool that allows you to get traffic insights for any website. You type in a website and right away you’ll get global rank, country rank, and category rank of that website, along with a nice graph that shows the weekly number of visitors in the last 6 months. You can see how many leads come from social, search, referrals, display ads, and many more. There also is a big orange bar that lets you add competitors and even gives you suggestions on who you may want to watch.
similar web
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Obtain traffic insights for any website
  • Obtain global, country, and category rank for any website
  • Receive suggestions of competitors you may want to watch
  • View the data in graphic format
Price: There is a basic account for $99 per month, an advanced account for $599 per month, and an enterprise account for $2,999 per month. The basic and advanced accounts offer a free trial. You can contact the company if you’re interested in the enterprise package.

15. Compete Digital Marketing Solutions – a tool for web rankings

This is a tool from Compete and it works very much like the SimilarWeb tool. You type in a domain, and immediately you see competitive rank and unique visitors. You can export the CSV to help get your whole team involved.
complete digital marketing solution
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Obtain the competitive rank and unique visitors for any website
  • Export the CSV to get your team involved in data
Price: If a site you’re looking for has relatively low traffic, you’re going to have to be a PRO member to get any information. There is an introductory package for $199 and an advanced package for $649 per month. There also is an option for a custom plan, in which case, you talk to the people in charge and create something that works for you (and negotiate a price).

16. What Runs Where – a tool for monitoring ads

Although this resource specializes in online media buying and helping businesses buy correctly, it has some great features for watching your competition. It supports over 40 ad networks across several different countries and allows you to track a list of your competitors. You then get an alert every time that competitor launches a new ad or publishes new content.
what where
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Track ad production of competitors
  • Receive alerts each time a new ad or content is published
Price: You have the choice between getting results about Advertising Awareness, Mobile Awareness, or both. The plan for both, the third option, is the most popular and runs $299/month for the Basic plan and $700/month for the Premium plan.

17. Open Site Explorer – a tool for backlinks

This tool comes from Moz, so you know it’s got to be good. It’s one of the most popular tools out there today, and it allows you to follow your competitors’ link-building efforts. You can see who is linking back to them regarding PageRank, authority/domain, and anchor text. You also can compare link data, which can help keep things easy.
open site explorer
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Find out who is linking to your competitors
  • Compare link data of your competitors
Price: You can get some data for free right away, but in order to use Open Site Explorer to the fullest extent, you will need Moz’s Analytics Standard package for $99/month.

18. Ahrefs – a tool for backlinks

This is another popular tool. It will show you things like top pages, IPs, and external links regarding your competitors. Speaking from experience, the site has great customer service and works with you to make sure you get what you need.
ahrefs
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Find IPs and external links to your competitors
Price: This tool is free if you want only 3 different competitor reports and 10 results (limited time only), but most upgrade for $79/month to get more detailed information.

19. Alexa – a tool for web rankings

This is one of the more advanced tools available, and it has been rating websites for a long time (much like a PageRank). In fact, if you have the Moz toolbar, you will see the Alexa ranking of a site right there on your SERP. This tool does it all when it comes to spying on your competitors (linking, traffic, keywords, etc.) and is an excellent resource if your competitors are international.
alexa
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Obtain data on international competitors
  • Obtain rankings of websites for an overall picture
Price: The Basic plan is only $9.99/month, the PRO plan is $49/month, and the Advanced plan is $149/month.

20. Simply Measured – a little bit of everything

This is another very advanced tool that offers everything you possibly could want to know about your competitors – trends, traffic and conversions, analysis, social media, etc. There are 35 different reports you can access.
simply measured
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Choose one of 35 reports for data on competitors (trends, traffic, social, etc.)
Price: A basic plan is $500/month if you’re interested in data on competitors

21. Majestic SEO – a tool for backlinks

One of the more popular tools, Majestic SEO allows you to download the link profile for any of your competitors’ sites. This means thousands and thousands of links will be right at your fingertips. You can export the link profile, and then slice it and dice it as you wish.
majestic seo
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Download the link profile of any competitor
  • Export the link profile and move the data around as you see fit
Price: There is a free option, a Silver plan for $49/month or $499.90/year, a Gold plan for $149.99/month or $1,499.90/year, and a platinum plan for $399.99/month or $3,999.90/year. I recommend checking out their pricing page because it lets you know which types of companies should use which types of plans.

22. The Search Monitor – a tool for keywords

This tool is not nearly as popular as many of the others, but I still think it offers great information. It focuses solely on competitor data. Also, it allows you to monitor affiliates and trademarks. It monitors results from Google, Bing, Yahoo, YouTube, and Baidu along with blogs, websites, forums, news, mobile, and shopping.
the search monitor
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Monitor affiliates and trademarks
  • View results from Bing, Yahoo, YouTube, and Baidu
  • View results from forums, news, mobile, and shopping
Price: There is a Basic package for $299/month, Pro for $499/month, and Ultimate for $799/month. You also can pay a few dollars more for extra keywords. There is an option for an Enterprise package where you call the company and discuss a price.

23. iSpionage – a tool for keywords

This is another keyword monitoring tool that allows you to type in a competitor and see the best performing keywords for organic as well as for PPC (in both Google and Bing), and how much the competitor spends on both organic and paid search. You can see the competitor’s most effective ad copy, and you can look at graphs that compare all of this data.
ispionage
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Analyze best performing keywords of competitors for organic
  • Analyze best performing keywords of competitors for PPC (Google and Bing)
  • Find out how much competitors spend on paid search and organic
  • View the most effective ad copy of competitors
  • View the data in graphic form for comparison
Price: The Silver package is $59/month, the Gold package is $89/month, and the PRO package is $129/month.

24. Ontolo – a tool for backlinks

Although often labeled as a backlinks tool, this tool also puts a focus on content marketing. It helps you know how to prioritize your content to keep things moving, learn where to promote your content by identifying authors who link to your content, and gives you suggestions for link-building opportunities. Of course, this is a more advanced tool so there are quite a few more details that go into how it works, which is why I highly recommend their free trial.
ontolo
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Identify authors who link to your content
  • Receive suggestions for link-building opportunities
Price: The Solo package is $47/month, the Professional package is $97/month, and the Agency package is $297/month.

25. Link Prospector – a tool for backlinks

This is one of my personal favorites because it’s all about link building and how that relates to your content. You choose your type of report – guest posting, links pages, reviews, donations, content promotions, or giveaways – and then enter your key phrases. A list of link-building opportunities based on what you’re looking for is generated for you.
link prospector
Best Ways to Use This Tool:
  • Get link-building opportunity suggestions
Price: If you are going by the credit system, you can try it for free with one credit, pay as you go with 5 credits for $10, or pay $2 per credit. After those choices, you can choose to select a package, all of which have monthly fees and all of which have a different number of credits and price per credit per month. The consultant package is $27/month, Agency is $47/month, and Enterprise is $97/month. It’s a tad confusing, so definitely check out the website to see their price chart.

The Takeaway

It’s worth mentioning again that the vast majority of the tools above offer a free trial of their upgraded version so you can give them a test run before making any type of purchase. Definitely take a look at the free trials that are offered. If you can’t find one, try emailing the company. You might be surprised at just how many will give you a free trial even if it’s not explicitly offered! In the end, it’s all about trial and error, and determining your goals and your price range, before choosing the tool that works best.

Can You Check Out Your Competitors Without Using Any Tools?

The answer certainly is yes,” but it does take a little bit of planning and preparation. If you’re not interested in investing in any tools or relying on any free tools, use the help of Google and Bing to find the site owners by doing some advanced query searches. There essentially are two different approaches you may want to take. Both of the following strategies are more advanced “secret cheats,” but they will keep you away from using any tools!

Find all of your competitors’ websites

There are four steps you can follow if you want to find your competitors’ websites:
  1. Reverse Google Whois Lookups
  2. Perform Reverse IP Lookups
  3. Reverse Google AdSense Lookups
  4. Reverse Google Analytics Lookups
Making this happen takes some time and thought, so to learn how to complete all of these steps, visit this article from Digital Inspiration.

Find sites hosted on the same server

You can do this easiest with Bing. All you need to do is find the IP address of any website, which you can learn about here, and then go to Bing and type the following into the search box:
ip:<IP Address>
Once you do this, you will be shown a list of all domains that are hosted on the same server as the website you started with, including .com, .net, .in, and many others.



https://blog.kissmetrics.com/25-sneaky-online-tools/