Listening Tools



We know by now that we have to listen before we jump into social media. But the question I often get asked is how?  I just got an email from a friend today who is in NYC at a conference and she said “I am looking for concrete answers and all I get is platitudes!”

What to Listen For:

In order to listen well you have to decide what you are looking for.  Start with your company name, brand names, competitors and add generic terms that describe your business and/or your product

Example:  a skin care company should also listen for mentions of skin care, dry skin, aging, anti aging, wrinkle cream etc.  You can do some keyword research to see what phrases people are searching for, or look into your own analytics to see what words and phrases people search to find your website.

Free Tools

The most basic tool is RSS.  You can set up a dashboard using  something as simple as an iGoogle page.

You can see how to do this in this short video

Another tool you can use to make a great dashboard is NetVibes.  Here is a video on how to set it up.

And watch this video I made to show you how to do the searches

Do the searches in Google BlogSearch, Twitter, Yahoo News, and other social websites like Technorati, digg.com,  StumbleUpon and Delicious

Subscribe to the RSS Feed for these searches and pull the data into your RSS reader. Watch the video of how to do this

There are other free tools that can help you listen to conversations

Backtype

IceRocket

SocialMention

Paid Tools

There are many monitoring tools on the market now.  Each one has its own set of features and pricing structure

ViralHeat Read a review

BuzzLogic Insights
Radian 6
Buzzmetrics
Trackur
Visible Technologies
Cision

Techrigy (review from TechCrunch)

Sysomos Read the review by Dave Fleet

Jive Software They integrated Filtrbox into their Jive Market Engagement Solution.

Getting Value from Listening Tools

Smart social media gal Liz Strauss posted this article about how to get the most from listening tools. It’s a must-read for anyone involved in this activity

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Image credit: K Y Olsen

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Posted by Sally Falkow On 24 June 2010 No Comments



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