“6 Essential Twitter Tools to Find and Connect With Influencers” plus 1 more |
6 Essential Twitter Tools to Find and Connect With Influencers Posted: 02 Sep 2013 08:37 AM PDT This is a guest contribution from Adam Connell, blogger at Bloggingwizard.com. In the following post you're going to discover a wide range of powerful and useful tools that will help you find and connect with the influencers on Twitter. There have been a lot of great posts here on ProBlogger, a few of the best ones can be found here, here and here. I'm going to be taking a different look at what is possible on Twitter. This isn't going to be just another list of tools that you can use to manage your Twitter profile – we are going to be talking about how to identify and connect with influencers in within your niche. Before I dive in, I want to give you some background information on why you need to find and connect with influencers within your niche. Influence MarketingInfluence marketing is all about identifying who has influence within your industry or niche and market directly to them. Think about it like this, there are influencers within most niches or industries on the web and they have an existing audience so the ultimate aim of using these tools is that you will be able to tap into that audience and use it to market your blog. You can use other platforms to find and connect with influencers, but ultimately Twitter influencer marketing is much more straight forward and there are enough tools on the market to help you. Please note that there are an enormous number of tools available that can be used for influencer research and an even larger number of tools for Twitter in general – this is not an exhaustive list by any means. Twitter Influencer Research Tools1. Simply MeasuredSimply Measured is a social analytics tool that will give you access to an incredible range of reporting and data collection tools. At first glance, their subscriber toolset is quite expensive, but they do have an impressive range of free reports that you can have access too. They're not just limited to Twitter either. Some of them include LinkedIn, Facebook, Vine, Google Analytics and more. There is even a report that gives you a detailed combination of analytics that incorporates both Twitter and Klout data. Simply Measured's reporting tools will allow you to identify exactly who has the most influence among your network of followers. This will tell you who you need to connect with and build relationships with. 2. TwtrlandTwtrland is an incredible social intelligence research tool that works with Twitter and Instagram. It excels at allowing you to easily find influencers and find market insights. There is a free option and premium option ($19.99 per month), even the free account is still incredible powerful but you just won't be able to export reports and lists. There are a few other restrictions but one of the reasons why I like this is that you can still actually use the free account, most free accounts are restricted to the point where it is pointless even using (and then you subscribe of course). You will get some interesting data about your Twitter account, but what you're looking for here is to look at the follower's analysis. There is an immediate breakdown of the demographics of your Twitter followers – top followers, countries, cities and skills of your followers but the real fun stuff happens when you click 'browse all'. Next, tick the 'power user' option under Typecast, select your metrics, skills and other demographics – this will show you an incredible list of all of the people that you need to reach out to and connect with. 3. InkyBeeInkyBee is positioned as a blogger outreach tool but it also excels at finding market influencers. Whether you're doing blogger outreach or influencer research, the process is the same. Add a 'list' and name it as the market you're searching for influencers in then add a discovery job by inputting 3 different terms that you would imagine influencers to talk about in a single blog post. InkyBee will go out and find blogs from all over the web that fit your search terms and pull in some really useful data that is outlined in the image above. You can order them by different metrics and then export to PDF or Excel documents too. The way I usually use InkyBee is to find influencers but also gather data of other influencers that I have discovered using different tools because you can manually add lists of blogs. 5. Commun.itCommun.it is a great tool that can separate out your followers and people you follow into a number of different categories while giving you the tools you need to help build and maintain valuable relationships. The influencer research is essentially done for you because one of the categories just so happens to be influencers; along with supporters and engaged members. You can use this to follow and continue to connect with these users and continue to build powerful relationships. One of the difficulties that people sometimes have is what to do next, who do you respond to? Who do you follow? Who do you engage with? Commun.it actually lists these all out in a straight forward dashboard so you don't need to leave the page and go into another Twitter management tool. 5. FollowerwonkFollowerwonk is bundled in with Moz Pro so it does mean that is a paid tool starting at $99 per month but it also means access to some really helpful tools that go beyond Twitter and even social media. You can do a bunch of different things like compare users, track who is following you, analyse and sort followers but where this really helps with influencer research is the search function. Just search for a phrase that is particular to your market and you'll get a huge list of Twitter users that you can export to Excel and then filter by social authority and the number of followers they have (along with a bunch of other helpful data). 6. TwellowTwellow is essentially a database of Twitter users arranged by a variety of categories and then by the number of followers a user has. You can then dive deeper and view a user's profile which pulls in social profiles along with their website. There is a search function too so you can find users that talk about the exact topic that you're looking for. This platform does revolve mostly around the number of followers a user has, the metrics aren't much more complex than that but it's still a huge database that makes users easy to find in various niches. The important thing to remember is that just because someone has a lot of followers, doesn't mean they get a lot of engagement; this is why I like to search Twellow for users with websites and add them to InkyBee to get some more comprehensive data. SummaryYou may have noticed that I haven't listed Klout or Kred as one of the Twitter influencer research tools, and I have my reasons for that. I have found that these tools are better at monitoring my own influence within particular verticals, rather than finding other influencers. That's not to say it can't be done, but as bloggers we only have a finite amount of time to spend on certain tasks so we need to focus on using the right tools for the job at hand. There are a lot more tools that you could use for this too, but the idea of this post is to make things easier for you, and I haven't found every tool on the market yet. So I'll put the question to you – which influencer tools are you using right now? I'd love to hear more in the comments below, whether you use them for Twitter or any other social platform. Adam Connell is the operations manager at UK Linkology. He can be found blogging over at Bloggingwizard.com, where he talks about marketing, social media, SEO and a few other topics. Follow him on Twitter @adamjayc. Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger 6 Essential Twitter Tools to Find and Connect With Influencers |
Increase your SEO with Team Content Marketing! Posted: 30 Aug 2013 08:24 AM PDT This is a guest blog contribution from Matt Ganzak, founder of EliteGurus.com and BuildNetworkPlus.com. Content marketing and SEO is getting more difficult. Each day, there are thousands of new domains purchased and thousands of new websites going online. Most new bloggers and content writers will get started with their site, staying active for a couple months, and then reality hits them. No traffic to their articles. The time does not seem worth the effort. Content Marketing can be FRUSTRATING!In an effort to remove outdated and irrelevant search results, Google has been updating their systems over the years with a series of updates. The latest Google update, Penguin, was said to lower the ranks for websites that have poor quality links and also took into consideration the relevancy. This was the push some businesses and bloggers needed to find a better way to build quality SEO. Today's Content Marketing Strategy for SEOAccording to Google, the best way to get quality rankings is to follow this guide: 1) Post quality content that gets shared 2) Have social widgets easy to access 3) Use Google Plus profiles for authors 4) Use Google Plus Pages for sites 5) Guest blog on other sites to earn link backs 6) Do not buy links 7) Setup your web pages targeting keywords 8) But do not over optimize In a nutshell, there is no shortcut to boosting your organic traffic, so just put out the quality content and they will come. Well, this strategy is causing newbie bloggers to get frustrated. So what is the solution?I have been teaching my clients to build networks within their niche industry, and share each other's articles. This is a strategy that will build your organic SEO naturally as all the sites work together to grow traffic. Many bloggers choose to be loners and just focus on "their audience" but realistically, today's Google Algorithm stacks the cards against these loners. Fact is, you need to reach out and make new friends. Connect on the social networks, and reshare each other's content. Then also guest blog on each other's sites and even send newsletter's to each other's lists. If you build small niche teams and work together, Google will build your PageRank and Domain Authority as your sites grow together. This strategy does not create overnight success, and can be rather time consuming. But Google will index their community with excellent authority and continue to do so as her network grows. Steps to creating your NetworkThe first step is to decide on your niche market, and do not stray from it! If you confuse Google by having so many different industries, Google will not index you with high relevance for your target industry. Choose and stay the course. Next, determine who your competitors are in your vertical. You can do this with a Google search for your keywords. And I always like to check Alexa.com rankings to get a look at their traffic score. After that, choose relevant keywords with high search volume but low competition. I suggest picking 4-7 keywords to target. If you choose more, you can spread your site too thin which will lower your keyword density for your target keywords. Lastly, find out where your niche industry peers hang out. This can literally mean go to networking events in person, or meetup groups. Take business cards! But you will also want to find online communities dedicated to your niche. Get in, get involved and start networking together. Personally, I have been doing this sort of networking for the past year and my group has been growing. If you would like to join, I would be more than happy to chat and put up guest posts on any of my websites. So let's all work together to improve our PageRank and Domain Authority to grow our readership together. Content Marketing and SEO has become a team effort. I look forward to meeting each and everyone one of you. Matt has been working in marketing for the past 12 years. He is an innovator of new ideas and has been training businesses on building their online presence. He specializes in Website Development, SEO, blogging, PPC, media buying and monetization strategy. Connect with Matt on EliteGurus.com, and be sure to check out his WordPress hosting (DollarWebsiteClub.com). Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger |
You are subscribed to email updates from @ProBlogger To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
0 comments:
Post a Comment