Link building is nowhere near dead, and some of the best link opportunities can be discovered by setting up email alerts for various things that are published on the web. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand runs through eight specific types of alerts that you can implement today for improved SEO.
For reference, here's a still of this week's whiteboard!
Tools mentioned this week
Video transcription
Howdy Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Today we're going to chat about email alerts and using them to help with some of your SEO efforts, specifically content identification, competitive intelligence, some keyword research, and, of course, a lot of link building because email alerts are just fantastic for this.
Now here's what we've got going on. There are a number of tools that you can use to do email alerts. Obviously, Google Alerts, very well-known. It's free. It does have some challenges and some limitations in scope, so you won't be able to do everything that I'm going to talk about today.
There's Fresh Web Explorer from Moz. Of course, if you're a Moz Pro subscriber, you've probably used Fresh Web Explorer. And Fresh Web Explorer's alerts functionality, in particular, is kind of my favorite Moz feature period right now.
We also have some very strong, good competitors in this space—Talkwalker, Mention.net, and Tracker—all of which have many of the features that I'm going to be talking about here. So whatever program you're using, this stuff can help.
That being said, I am going to be talking in terms of the operators that you would use for Fresh Web Explorer specifically. Google Alerts has some of these operators but not all of them, and so do Talkwalker, Mention, and Tracker. They might not have all of these, or theirs might be slightly different. So make sure you take a look at how the search operators for each of those work before you go engaging in this.
The operators I'm going to specifically mention are the minus command, which removes. I think that works in all of them. That's essentially saying show me this stuff, but don't show me anything that contains this.
Link:, this works in plenty of them. That's showing links to the URL specifically. RD: which in Fresh Web Explorer shows links to the root domain, and SD: which shows links to the subdomain.
Quotes, which matches something exactly, works in all of these. TLD, which shows only links from a given domain extension. If I want to see only German websites, I can put TLD:DE and see only sites from Germany. Then, site: which shows only results from a specific sub or root domain, as opposed to like SD or RD, which show links to a subdomain or root domain.
This will all make sense in a second. But what I want to impart is that you can be using these tools, these types of commands to get a ton of intelligence that's updated daily.
What I love about alerts is whether you do it weekly, or you do it daily, however, whatever frequency works for you, the beautiful thing is it's a constant nudge, a constant reminder to us as marketers to be concentrating on something like, oh, yeah, I should really be thinking about link building. I should really be thinking about what my competition's writing about. I should really be thinking about what bloggers in this niche think about my keywords and who they're talking about when they mention these keywords, all that kind of stuff.
That nudge phenomenon of just having the repetitive cycle is really important for marketers. I feel like it helps me a tremendous amount when I get my alerts every night just to remember oh, yeah, I should do this. I should take a look at that. It's right in my email. I take care of it with the rest of my work. Very, very helpful.
#1: Links to my competitors, but not to me
I mean come on. It's just a gimme. It's an opportunity for a bunch of things. It shows you what types of keywords and content people are writing about in the field, and it almost always gives you a link opportunity or at least insight into how you might get a link from those types of folks. So I love this.
I'm going to imagine that I'm Rover.com. Rover is a startup here in Seattle. They essentially have a huge network. They're sort of like Airbnb but for people who do dog sitting and pet sitting. Great little company.
Rover has got some competitors in the field, like DogVacay.com and PetSitters.org and some of these other ones. They might, for example, create an alert that is RD:dogvacay.com. Show me people who link to my competitor's domain, anywhere on my competitor's domain, people who link to PetSitters.org minus RD:rover.com. Don't show me people who also link to me. This will show them a subset of folks who are linking to their competition not linking to them. What a beautiful link building opportunity.
#2: Mentions my brand, but doesn't link to me
Number two, another gimme and one that I've mentioned previously in some link building videos on Whiteboard Friday, places that mention my brand but don't link to me. A number of these services can help you with this. Unfortunately, tragically, Google Alerts is the only one that can't. But mentions my brand, doesn't link to me, this is great.
In this case, because Rover's brand name is so generic, people might use it for a lot of different things, they're not always referring to the company Rover. They might use a keyword in here like Rover and any mention of dog sitting minus RD:rover.com. That means someone's talked about Rover, talked about dog sitting, and they didn't link to them.
This happens all the time. I have an alert set up for Moz that is "RD:moz.com," and actually for me I just put minus Morrissey because the singer Morrissey is like the most common thing that people mention with Moz. I think I have another one that's like "moz marketing minus RD:moz.com." Literally, every week I have at least some news sites or sites that have mentioned us but haven't linked to us. A comment or a tweet at them almost always gets us the link. This is great. I mean it's like free link building.
#3: Mentions my keywords, but doesn't link to me
This is similar to the competitive one but a little broader in scope.
So I might, for example, say "dog sitting or pet sitting minus RD:rover.com." Show me all the people in the space who are talking about dog sitting. What are they saying?
The nice thing is with Fresh Web Explorer, and I think Talkwalker and Mention both do this, they're sorted in terms of authority. So you don't just get a bunch of random jumble. You can actually see the most authoritative sites.
Maybe it is the case that The Next Web is covering pet sitting marketplaces, and they haven't written about Rover, but they're mentioning the word "dog sitting." That's a great outreach point of view, and it can help uncover new content and new keyword opportunities too.
#4: Shows content produced by a competitor or news site on a topic related to me
For example, in the case of Rover.com, they might be a little creative and go, "Man, I really want to see whenever the Humane Society mentions dog sitting, which they do maybe once every two or three months. Let me just get a reminder of that. I don't want to subscribe to their whole blog and read every post they put out. But I do really care when they talk about my topic."
So you can set up an alert like dog sitting "site:humanesociety.org." Perfect. Brilliant. Now I'm getting those content ideas. Potentially there are some outreach opportunities here, link building opportunities, keyword opportunities. Awesome.
#5: Show links coming from a geographic region
Let's say, hey, I saw PetSitters.org is going international. They just opened up their UK branch. They haven't actually, but let's say that they did. I could create an alert like "RD:petsitters.org TLD:.co.uk." Now it shows me all the people who are linking to PetSitters.org from the U.K. Since I know they just expanded there, I can start to target all those people who are coming out.
#6: Links to me or my site
This is very important for two reasons. One is so you know when new links are coming, where they're coming from, that kind of stuff, which is cool to see. Sometimes you can forward those on, see what people are saying about you. That's great.
But my favorite part of this is so I can thank those people, usually via Twitter, or so I can promote it on social media networks. Seriously, if someone's going to go and say something nice about Rover and link to me, and it's a third party news source or a blogger or something, I totally want to share that with my audience, because it reminds them of me and is also great promotional content that's coming from someone else, an authoritative external voice. That's wonderful. This can also be extremely helpful, by the way, to find testimonials for your business and press mentions that you might want to put on your site or in your conversion funnel.
#7: Find blogs that are writing about topics relevant to my business
This is pretty slick.
It turns out that most of these alerts systems will also look at the URL when they're considering alerts, meaning that if someone has blog.domain.com, or domain.com/blog/whateverpost, you can search for the word "blog" and then something like "dog sitter." Optionally, you could add things like site:wordpress.com, site:blogspot.com, so that you are getting more and more alerts that are showing you blogs that write about your topic, your keywords, that kind of stuff. This is pretty slick.
I especially like this one if you have a very broad topic area. I mean if you're only getting a few results with your keywords anyway, then you can just keep an alert on that shows you everything. But if you have a very broad topic area, and dog sitting is probably one of those, you want to be able to narrow in on the blogs that you really care about or the types of sites that you really care about.
#8: Links to resources/data that I can compete with/offer a better version
I like this as a link building strategy, and I'll use it on occasion. I don't do it all the time, but I do care at certain points when we're doing a campaign.
For example, a link to a resource or a piece of data that's been collected out there on the Web that I can compete with or offer a better version of. Somebody, for example, is linking to the Wikipedia page on dog sitting or, let's say, a statistics page from a Chamber of Commerce or something like that, and I have data that's better, because I've done a survey of dog owners and pet sitting, and I've collected all this stuff. So I have more recent, and more updated, and more useful data than what Wikipedia has or this other resource.
I can reach out to these folks. I love seeing that. When you see these, these are often really good link targets, targets for outreach. So there's just a lot of opportunity by looking at those specific resources and why people link to them and who.
So, with all of this stuff, I hope you're going, setting up those alerts, getting your daily or weekly nudges, and improving your SEO based on all this stuff.
Thanks, everyone. See you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday.
Take care.
And to make life ever easier, create as many IFTTT Recipes as many email alerts you schedule. For instance: If Freshwebexplorer emails me than send me a Txt message (or DM me)
Or funnel them into your team's task management system for follow-up.
Another way is to set up alerts for the people who write/speak in your industry. For instance, You can set up alerts of people who are sharing expert advice nowadays on different SEO blogs so whenever they get mentioned somewhere, you can outreach the blogger/journalist with your expert advice on their next series post. It ultimately earns you exposure and links!
That's a great suggestion too!
This post + The Ultimate List of IFTTT Recipes for Marketers = Beast Mode
Totally. SEER did an amazing job with that resource.
Hey Hiral! Thanks for suggesting a useful tool.
The best thing about these WBFs are the suggestions in the comments. These are real time, implementable tips that help alot.
Thanks for the great network Rand!
You're right. If you want to be in front of your competitors you have to set up these alerts to your email account. In this way you can watch your competitors' progress, find the newest and most popular keywords, and see if other potential competitors are going to appear.
Not sure tld:.co.uk works - it doesn't bring back any results in Fresh Web. Tld:uk works fine though as an alternative.
I think you found a bug! It looks like FWE is improperly ignoring TLDs that have an extra "." in them. Will ping the team ASAP and get that sorted. Thanks Emma!
Thanks for raising this Emma, I know it was a while back but I can still recall the confusion in the office at the time.
Been using a combination of these tools for some time now as they all seem to pick up different keyword alerts. Quite funny, with Fresh Web Explorer it picks up our brand references when we have published a blog post in our Word Press hosted blog (US domain) but does not show the brand references on this post from our primary domain which is in the UK where the full content resides and yet my settings for tracking these terms are quite broad. I think Google Alerts and Mention do pick this up however they don't pick up others that FWE does.
So I guess you need to employ a complimentary set of these tools, all of which are great to have in your arsenal for understanding your presence/positioning and competitor presence/positioning in your field.
David
David - please feel free to email me any feeds you're not seeing in FWE and we'll get them added (and try to determine why we didn't see them). We're also about to grow the FWE index by 2-3X through some integration with bitly data, so you may see even more stuff there soon. My email's rand at moz dot com. Thanks so much for the feedback!
Will do.
I think just in summary for this one our article was added to our G+ stream, within a couple minutes Google Bot made it's way from Mountain View and did it's business, couple of hours later the brand alert came through from Google.
For our WP blog subscribers we sent out a mini snippet version of the article linking to the main piece mentioned above (link included Google URL Custom Campaign parameters , the next day we got the FWE notification of the blog post BUT not the main article.) I think this has happened before though.
I'll send you the details Rand, see what you think.
Best
David
Great actionable items for gathering information here, will definitely be sharing this with the team to make a process for when we bring on new accounts.
I'd love to see a follow up WBF that talks about how to approach those websites once you have all the information in order to actually get the links that we've found opportunities for.
Hey Rand,
Great stuff. These tools are awesome to track our brand & keywords mentions. I'm using the Google Alerts, Mentions & talkwalker but sorry to say I'm not very much convinced with the performance of Fresh Web Explorer. Sometimes it doesn't show me the mentions at all and on the other end I'm getting lots of nudges from mentions & talkwalker. Hopefully, you people will improve it's features in coming days.
Umar - can you send me any feeds (RSS/XML) that you're not seeing in FWE? We'll be happy to include them. As I noted to David above, we're also just about to grow the index considerably, but I really appreciate the feedback.
Impressive idea for seo.
Seems good. Till date I was only using Google Alerts but Moz's FreshWebExplorer seems much advanced.
Gonna try this.
Pretty nice resources. Cool stuff. Thanks Moz
Enjoyed that Rand & reminded me of lots of things I need to implement.
However I've found for international content (I'm in Australia ) Google alerts misses quite a bit (its less comprehensive now than it used to be) and many of the other services don't fully support international alerts.
FWE works for Australia, but the coverage is nowhere near as good as the North American sites and again misses quite a few sites.
Do you know of any services setup to work for international alerts?
Hi Rand,
very informative and done it by very well research , I also start link prospecting by these method i think they all are helpful for me and give me some good link those help me to improve my search ranking out of 8 i like Ist and 2nd third one is little bit hard to do but let's take a try of that also may be get some good links..! Thanks For sharing Wonderful stuff...! appreciating.
I doubt commands like "site:www.abc.com" and other similar keywords work, since I receive no alerts at all when I use them! Also, nothing beats free! Trackur maybe good, but it is not free, what a pity!
That sounds good , major things are well explained on link building
Awesome post! Can't wait to see you guys next week in Seattle!
Quick question: At the 5:41 mark, you mentioned sending a comment or a tweet to those that mentioned your brand but didn't link to you will almost always result in a link. What type of comment or tweet would you post in order to inspire those to share a link to your site? I kind of have an idea, but I'm sure yours is better. Thanks!
I find that something like "thanks so much for the mention; I believe the page/post/resource/tool you meant to reference is here: https://xyz" or "thanks so much for including Moz - in case you meant to link over, our website is https://xyz." My experience has been that not all broad brand mentions are incredibly easy but almost every mention that specifically references a particular page, resource, tool, blog post, study, etc can net you a link.
Great WBF Rand! I am going to remember this for later. Right now I primarily use Google Alerts and it works somewhat limited. I will definately try some of the other tools.
A Great post with lots of great stuffs.
Definitely it is simplifying the links building and SEO Strategies.. Good work Rand
I must admit, I wasn't using Fresh Web Explorer until now but in one word: WOW. It's such a need and handy tool to have. Exploring it till its full potential right now and i am truly blown away by it. Nice one. All thanks to Rands WBF video. Thanks Rand
Heidi just sent me to this video. You guys rock! 100 thumbs ups!!!
How to add URL to google alerts, just write it in first field?
In short we should avoid linking our website in any ways. Thanks you blog always help to learn new things.
These Email alerts are surely helpful for internet marketer, I am going to mention & freshwebexplorer. Another great whiteboard friday Rand.
In addition to Google alert, which site provides FREE alert service?
Rand that is really awesome, you just tell me the most important stuff which I was lacking.
And in real I thought why use the email alerts ? But now I know the clear answer to that, all thanks to you.
Thanks Rand...for this article this web explorer alert will help me to find some relevant sites.
I always use this alert to comment on blog
That's great post for info on those operators. I have been using some of them through Moz subscription of my friend, but thanks for the additional ones that you have mentioned. The best to discover for me was the first one and the eighth one which can actually yield a lot of benefits in SEO campaigns. Thanks for this post Rand!!
Nice one Rand. Loving the 'tash.
Great Whiteboard Friday Rand!
There is also tool made by awesome guys from Poland, it's called Brand24 https://brand24.net and it's available on US market. You can give 'em a shot!
Very cool! Will check it out and thanks for the heads up.
Thanks for the endorsement Jakub!
Rand: let me know if you'd be interested in using our tool. We would be honored :)
Good timing. I've just started some competitive analysis for link building. I'd never properly understood Fresh Web Explorer - and it would not have occurred to me use it for link building. Now I do - and now I will. Thank you!
Great work moz team! I simply love your #wbf sessions. Was thinking about a strategy for a long time wherein I could find opportunities in terms of links that my competitors were generating. Never thought that email alerts could be used for this. :)
Rand, thanks for outlining some of the great ways to use these tools -- I'm forwarding this post as a "must read" to my agency's PR staff. They rely on these alert tools (even more than we SEOs do) for mentions and more of clients, their executives, and their industries.
The company's a Pro user, so I'll give Fresh Web Explorer a plug when I send the post. :)
As always, excellent content. Do the Fresh Web alerts pick up social content too? I know there are other social tools but I'm always looking to have everything in the same place.
FWE doesn't consume the Tweetstream (it's $56K/month and a lot of engineering work to consume it, filter it, store it, and serve it, so we're staying focused on the blogosphere for now). You can use IFTTT for that, though! Check out https://blog.bufferapp.com/the-big-list-of-ifttt-recipes-for-social-media and https://www.seerinteractive.com/blog/ifttt-recipes-for-marketers
I think google alerts picks up the info as soon as it has seen a change in the page itself if it is indexed (updated Content) and also when a new page is indexed. You can get it for when you would like to have the notifications.. As It Happens, Daily, Weekly ect.
You can decide what type of alerts are included also. NEWS, BLOG, Etc.
That's pretty good. Never thought before that Google alerts can be used in such a way. Would love to try it. Thanks.
Great post, simplifying link building :)
Now I think I understand why you're always pushing Fresh Web Explorer so hard in all of your blog posts.
I agree, I hadn't messed around w/ FWE enough to know it accepted search operators.
It's kinda my new favorite toy. Sorry if I've been a little overexcited (I tweeted some of the reasons I love it over Google).
"Link building is nowhere near dead" great wbf Rand! the alerts are that little reminder we need to keep pushing good link back to our content
I'm waiting the reaction of Matt on this great research.
I am curently trying follow.net , it has some cool features.
Nice "tactical" WBF Rand. Would be awesome to see an expansion of this WBF with a list of recipes down the road... similar to what was referenced above with SEER and IFTTT. Maybe I'll submit one to YouMoz!
For Google Alerts and Talkwalker Alerts, I have it send me everything unfiltered instead of "only the best" b/c the filter will sometimes cut out legit mentions that it would have been good to be aware of.
Very well done Rand. I love it when you guys give actionable tips on how to use these tools. I've been using Google Alerts and now Talkwalker Alerts for over 3 years and didn't know you could use advanced operators.
Thank you.
Of course Google alerts are the best way. I am getting good reference links from Google alerts.
Good Job Rand! Explained very well! Brought out some other ideas I can explore using these tactics..
Thanks to remind some good stuff..
Yousuf
Great WBF - special people wich mention you, but don't link. I don't know if its a german problem, many people dont link to a site. Some are linking to the wrong root domain (www / non www f.ex.). I got so many links in that way!
But last week I was ill - so ill that I not even take a look at my Mails (yes possible / thatsway I watch the WBF today xD ) - When I looked at my mailaccount (I have special mail accounts for alerts) I got so many Mails... ouch!
Thanks Rands.. Ur blog always helps...
I'm voting for Private SEO network! We are getting a little crazy with letting everyone know how it all works!