Over the last couple weeks, I've seen some very cool new (and older, but "new to me") tools in the search marketing field that I think are worthy of testing to see if they make a good fit for your organization. I know I don't cover 3rd party tools as much as I should, so to make up, I've got 3 in a row.
The first, Refined Ads from Thomas Bindl's Refined Labs, is a game-changer in the PPC management space. The goals behind the project were to save PPC marketers time and energy through a more intuitive, more robust interface that took the pain out of the often tedious PPC management process.
I'll walk through a few of the screenshots Thomas sent over to help illustrate:
An integrated keyword discovery and search volume estimator tool (using the AdWords API) lets you use the same software to select that you do to manage.
When adding keywords, this spiffy interface lets you select the keyword match type on the fly.
The report data tabs are completely customizable, so you can choose which metrics you want to see and order the results by virtually anything.
With some tracking code embedded, you can see the statistics from your efforts right in the software - no need to load up your analytics software or run to Google/Yahoo! to get the data.
For special instructions or to make transitioning between multiple parties easier, Refined even has a custom note adding ability.
Now, obviously, I'm not a PPC expert, but I know Thomas is, and he's been working on this since I visited his new operation in Munich last spring. The buzz I've heard is that this is a top notch tool - the only information I don't have is on pricing. You'll have to talk to Refined to get that :)
Next up is a new tool from the gang at MindValleyLabs, one of my favorite blogs on the web (and one of the few where I actually read every post top to bottom). The product is "WordButler" and it aims to compete in the space filled by other 3rd party keyword research tools like Wordtracker & KeywordDiscovery.
There's three things you can do with WordButler. The first is keyword list creation:
It's not a bad system, but it would be great to have the terms/phrases they list as keyword phrases sortable in some type of popularity order. The copy and export functions are pretty solid, though.
Next up is keyword traffic estimation:
This is my favorite of the features it offers, since it not only predicts CPC, but traffic on each of the engines. Unfortunately, as with all keyword tools, when I plugged in traffic for terms and phrases I'm familiar with, the estimated clicks (I'm assuming it's for all SERPs) didn't match up very well. It's accurate in relative terms, but like the others, can be pretty wrong when it comes to precise numbers.
Finally, WordButler has a keyword suggestion system:
The keyword I used was "solar energy," and in fact, when I tried phrases like "alternative energy" or even just "energy" I got a lot of "cheap flights" and "cheap hotels" suggestions. I think this is an area in need of refinement, but I suspect they'll get better over time :)
As a special treat for SEOmoz blog readers, MindValley Labs is offering all readers the ability to download a free trial of the software here - https://www.wordbutler.com/products/promo/blogreaders. The trial lasts 7 days, after which it's $147 per year or $20 a month.
Last up in the tools review, we've got Advanced Web Ranking, a rank tracking system from Caphyon. I don't actually know anyone there - this was just a tool I stumbled across that kept getting positive mentions in the blogosphere.
The goal of AWR is to help you track rankings at the search engines for specific terms and phrases. As you probably know, Google in particular frowns on this practice because they don't like automated rank checking. On a personal level, I'm actually opposed to rank checking as well, though for entirely different reasons. I don't like to watch rankings primarily because they're a terrible metric for progress when compared to your web analytics (which report actual search traffic visit numbers). I'll go into a few reasons I'm so fundamentally against rank tracking:
- Rank tracking is inherently inaccurate:
- Rankings fluctuate hour-to-hour, never mind day to day.
- Universal search inclusion has made standard rank checking pointless on queries that include vertical results.
- Different data centers show different results.
- Personalization means that many searchers aren't seeing what you're seeing.
- Geo-targeting happens even at the state and city level now, meaning that for tons of searches, you're getting different ranking information than what other searchers see.
- Your rankings don't actually tell you anything substantive:
- If you were #3 yesterday and you're #5 today, what action are you going to take? Other than being interesting, it does nothing for you.
- If your rankings rise 3 or 4 positions, the same is true - it's nearly impossible to reverse what you did right and be sure. Once again, visitor analytics are a far better tool to judge.
- Exception - I do like knowing what page I'm ranking on
- Getting page-level rankings (e.g., page 1 for "seo tools," page 2 for "seo," etc) is great because I can use that to find low-hanging fruit and put a little extra effort into getting onto page 1.
- It would be great, technically, to see results grouped by 5 (top 5, 5-10, 10-15, etc.), but that's a level of detail you can't get from analytics, and with rank checking so inaccurate (see above), it's not worth it, IMO.
- All that said, SEOmoz will probably be building some sort of rank tracking tool in the future, just because the demand is so high (but I'll continue to rail against it even after that).
Ok, rant over. Let's look at the tool:
The overview is pretty solid, showing the websites you're tracking, the keywords being followed, and the ups and downs of rankings. I'm not sure why they include Alexa, though!
The "Current Rank" report shows the list of websites and their relative positions for a given term/phrase. You've also got the date function at the top, which, while nice, would actually be better to show in the columns (IMO). The column view for rankings is good because then you can compare long term progress over time, rather than just one day vs. another.
This report tries to mimic the SERPs themselves with historical rankings changes you can see. It would be great to see an aggregated data function for this, but as is, it's serviceable.
All in all, the Advanced Web Ranking toolset is a solid effort into rank tracking software, but it's nothing game changing. I think there's still a lot of opportunity to build a great tool in this space, but I'm ever mindful of the rank tracking issues I talked about above and Google's public distaste and public statements about tools like Web Position Gold.
Hopefully you've enjoyed peeking inside some of the latest tools for making SEO/M easier. Feedback is certanly welcome, not just by me, but, I presume, by the tool's creators as well. If you've got some alternates to these that you want to bring up, feel free to do so (and to link) in the comments.
Advanced Web Ranking has a couple of great features that go well beyond the usual rank checking.
1. It is Mac compatible!
2. It produces some very interesting reports such as the keyword rank report that shows the URL ranking as well as the position. This data can be exported to excel and then used to build other reports & power other tools.
3. You can sort the output by URL, so you can check your results against your keyword map.
I agree with you on the fact that rankings on their own don't mean much, but disagree that they don't serve a very useful purpose.
Let's say you consistently rank #1 (with the caveats that some people may see different results) but aren't getting very much traffic at all, this tells you that you're probably doing something wrong, and may want to look at your titles, snippets, etc..
And that's pretty priceless.
Fair point and definitely something I overlooked. I suppose you could also see if sections of the site gain/fall in rankings all together (subdomains or subfolders) and that would be somewhat valuable.
Wow, i really like firts 2 . I must have a try!
AdWords deservers a new look at! :)
They are now using REAL NUMBERS!!!
there is this whole thing on google webmaster tools that says..
"Google's Terms of Service do not allow the sending of automated queries of any sort to our system without express permission in advance from Google. "
https://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?answer=66357
or did you get "express permission" if so.. kudos.. i might use one of these nifty things.. otherwise.. nope..
AWR has worked for me on a number of projects, especially when making such huge changes such as sitewide and page structure.
Agreed that Universal Search and personalization will skew the results, but AWR gives an aggregate measurement of movement among all of your keywords so that you can see total movement among all of your keyword targets.
Good for a gauge of your onpage/onsite/link building changes by getting this measurement before and after.
I'll check out the other 2 tools as I've never seen them before.
Thanks Rand.
Hi Rand - I know advanced web ranking well - definitely one of if not the best visibility / position monitoring tools for enterprise analytics - and you know that sometimes the SEM team HAVE to watch these metrics, so if that's the case, give in and get AWR. Ranking checkers are frowned on by the search engines, but just every now and again, they can be useful.
BTW - Have you checked out their sister software, advanced link manager? 1 english pound says you'll love it...
I though WordButler was awful...the developer hasn't responded to a requestI sent a week ago and they spam your e-mail every day (even though I have unsubscribed from the list 3 times now). Avoid like the plague.
Advanced Web Ranking is pretty great, though flawed as Rand points out. Since I didn't think of rankings as very important and tried to get clients to check out their analytics, I would just pump out a webposition report if a client was pestering me about rankings. Some didn't understand anything but rankings. When webposition stopped being able to collect Google data, I did a quick search and found this little program and was very glad to see it reviewed here. I won't be poring it every minute, but it certainly gets the job done: generating reports for clients. I work in a very non web savvy area, and these is still (unfortunately) a necessity for something like this. I can't wait for the SEOmoz version!
I've been using Web Position for years now but I think it's time to try other tools. AWR looks very promising
Always good to hear honest reviews Rand. I've seen other highly trafficked seo blogs promote seo software that is at best medium grade tool(s) for search marketers as if it's the Industry standard just to make an extra buck. I think this goes along with other recent posts about brand management and how all buzz is good for business, I have to disagree. Reason being, if you have a name in the business and other people in the industry look to you for quality info but the info is diluted with bought advertisement thats junk, then... in my book you just lost all credibility and one devoted member of your community. FYI: I'm using a mac and have been frustrated with the lac of SEM programs so I've decided to put together an app that will be available to anyone running a mac, no charge, no strings (When I'm not using seomoz's tools of course :) ). If anyone here in the community has a mac and has any ideas of different features you would want to include please post here or PM me, thanks.
Wow Rand, great post!
The first tool, Refined Ads actually looks promising. I have a couple of gripes with tools like that (even an enterprise solution like Omniture SearchCenter):
If the Refined Ads guys are monitoring this post, can you please provide some more insight?
Thanks!
Arthur
It's the middle of the night in Munich (where they're based), but I'm certain they'll stop by to check in. If you're looking for paid search management software, my understanding from folks more knowledgable than I am is that Refined is a very good product.
Hi Arthur,
We currently sync the data in real time from Refined Ads to Google. The other way around we fetch the data every few hours. The frequency can be changed on a per client basis in order to fit your needs best.
We did love AdWords Editor and that's exactly where we started. Our main goal was to combine AdWords Editor with Excel, a bid management as well as a clever keyword tool. Looking at it now, I think we have a way better interface for management than any other tool on the market, especially when it comes down to handling lots of keywords.
Hi rand
I ll check only the wordbutler tool. It works very nice but i doesnt work with german search word. Sometimes other tools pools also good keywords for the german market, but Wordbutler doesnt. But thanks for the tip from germany
These tools sound great. I will have to invest some time trying them out.
By the way Rand, if you don't want anyone to know what the urls are in fully-customizable.png, you might want to erase some more. If you overlay the 5 iterations of the website, you know the URL. Personally, I have no idea what anyone could do with that info as it is just a partial URL.
Interesting tools. Maybe WordButler will integrate the new figures Google started to show this morning on their keyword tool.
As for rankings, they are mainly useful to satisfy the clients ego... or make them call you in fury because they are no longer #1 on that particular keyword they boasted about last week.
This said I have found another tool that has an interesting function. It is called Yooda SeeURank (beware, the website is in French) and it has one function I have not found elsewhere called: competitor analysis.You type a number of keywords, choose a series of search engines and it gives you the top 20 websites on these. The main drawback is that you cannot get detailed results on this kind of query, so you do not know who ranks on what. If anyone has a tool that does the same thing and provides details, I'd be glad to try it!
Are those new numbers Google's providing available in the AdWords API?
No, unfortunately they are not (yet) providing them. :(
Yes they are.
(edit: No they aren't, I clearly didn't understand the difference between API and what I see online. Thanks ThomasB for helping me understand :) )
Not via the API though
So, then what does it mean by '90,500' for 'avg search volume? For 'black tea'
*This is from the original link to google's adwords recent post of new numbers with their application.
The AdWords API is not the normal web interface
I see. I stand corrected. :) Thanks for the help.
I checked out that word butler page and upon exit it poped up a alert box and had a last ditch effort to engage with me. A shady tatic for sure. If thier software is anything like thier website I would be mindful for being data mined. -fwiwCheers.
Thanks for the great review! WordButler is a great find here. Will take advantage of the 7-day spin. This looks like a great tool for SEO also.
AWR have used tool in the past. Reports are nice but wondered about accuracy. When I did a manual check, the reports were often off by a few. Will keep in mind that data is "relative" and a good indicator of improvement or loss in ranking.