12 Free Social Media Analytics Tools

From Denmark to Detroit, social media is a worldwide phenomenon that seems to be part addiction and part necessity. With Facebook's recent announcement that it's hit 500 million users and Twitter's move toward advertising with @earlybird it's becoming more apparent that if you want to get the word out about your business you need to step into the social media arena. However, all the excitement about social media doesn't mean much if you can't decipher what it means and what it's doing. Analytics to social media are like a compass to a navigator - if you don't understand where you're at you won't know where to go.

If the thought of analytics and numbers makes you shudder you're not alone. There are more people than not who feel intimidated by numerical data. The two toughest aspects of social media analytics are interpreting information and deciding what analytic tools best meet your needs. Fortunately, basic analytics doesn't require a PhD in statistics and the internet is filled with outstanding free tools and resources to help make metric crunching easy. So, if you can't afford enterprise-level services like Scout LabsRadian6 or Sysomos, you'll want to check out some of the freebies below to help you get a grip on your analytics.

Blogs

Use PostRank to help rank your blog content and news and and to determine what your fans are reading, sharing and organizing. It also identifies what your most popular posts are in your RSS feed.

Think of BlogPulse as a search engine for blogs and their posts. It's similar to Technorati, but it provides additional views such as trending and conversations so that you can see search competitive topics and how other blogs are ranking.

Comments

Beyond standard search for keywords and brand names you’ll want to penetrate what’s being discussed in blog commenting systems too. That’s where YackTrack comes in. Simply enter your keywords or terms to see a nicely organized list that you can drilldown to get specific mentions from.

Branding

One of the more substantial branding tools available is Social Mention. It aggregates user generated content from across multiple social media platforms and streamlines outcomes into a very simple and easy to interpret web page. The one thing Social Mention doesn't do is show a report over time. A work around this missing feature is to create an Excel spreadsheet and manually enter daily data that you gather. Otherwise, it's a great (and free) tool.

Perhaps more of an entertainment tool rather than a true metric evaluator, How Sociable measures your brand's keywords throughout 32 different social media sites. There's some confusion around the 'visibility score' that How Sociable has developed and not all data appears to be accurate. For example, if you run a search on iPhone it yields a visibility score of 9,453 and a Google PageRank score of zero. Odd to say the least. Looks like brand visibility metrics might have a few glitches, but it’ still worth exploring.

Trends & Topics

Head over to Addict-o-Matic and enter a unique search term, brand or product name or just about anything and it will perform a search that delivers the buzz (or results) broken down by social media platform. It's a very convenient snapshot that let's you look at your social reach and the social sites where you have more presence in comparison to others.

Twitter

There are so many Twitter tools available that deciding which one to use can be a daunting task. For the purpose of benchmarking your brand against your competition, Twitalyzer is ideal. It shows you what social media strategies are working and what’s not, which makes it easy to adjust social media campaigns to maximize better results.

The power of influence is a core component in any social media campaign. Knowing who has better reach and strength and engaging with them can help persuade your audience to promote your brand. Klout measures influence as it relates to your brand through Twitter. You can identify which customers and communities are more likely to become brand evangelists and work with them to drive conversations.

Another hand Twitter tool is TweetStats. You can graph how many tweets per hour, day and month, as well as look at your tweet timeline and reply statistics. TweetStats is a fantastic way to track your level of interaction and look at areas that need improvement.

Google

Google Analytics (GA) may leave you feeling unnerved, but it actually does a tremendous job on tracking numbers and data. We'll save GA how-tos for a future post. In the meantime, use PageRank Checker to see what Google thinks of your site. Using a scale from zero to 10, with 10 holding the most authority, you can run a quick search to find out how you rank.

In order for GA to actually work on your website you need to install tracking code on each page that you want the Google bot spiders to crawl. To make sure that you've set-up your code use SiteScan to confirm that you've performed a correct installation. Although SiteScan and PageRank Checker aren't direct analytic tools they are helpful in gauging Google-related tasks and standards.

Competitive

Quarkbase has been touted as the ‘imdb.com for websites’. By entering a website’s URL you are presented with names of people associated with the site, traffic data, social popularity, site description and sites that are similar. This is one of the best free competitive research tools available. Data can be used to help you better position your brand and establish goals and objectives.

There you have it. Granted, there are so many tools, free and paid, that accessible on the web, we hope that this short list gets you moving in the right direction.

What are some of the other free tools that you're using? How do you make them work for your brand and what do you like best about them? Share with us.

How To Add Google Analytics to Your Facebook Page

Not only are Facebook Pages a great way to promote your brand or service to your customers, but they also serve as excellent platforms to interact with your fans. But, how do you know what's eliciting a fan response and what's not? As most Facebook Page admins know, the Page Insight provided by Facebook is fairly limited in terms of data. If you want to get down and dirty you need something more powerful. Thankfully, you can integrate Google Analytics into your Facebook Page for more robust metrics and tracking and you don't need to be a whiz-kid coder to get it done.

Here's how:

Step 1.

If you haven't already, sign-up for a free Google Analytics account. Next, you'll create a profile for your Facebook Page by using your Facebook Page URL. You would enter http://www.facebook.com/yourFacebookPagename. Once you've successfully created your profile the Analytic's dashboard shows your URL and an Analytic's profile ID that looks like this:  UA-12345678-9.

Step 2.

Look for your UA number and visit Webdigi to generate an "image" for each Facebook Page that you want to track. The online application has some helpful hints to help you complete the form. After you've got your information entered, select the "Generate Code" button.

Grab the code and copy it.

Step 3.

The "Generate Code" button creates a chunk of HMTL that you'll need to copy and paste into your Facebook Page. This piece of code is the "image" that we referred to in Step 1. The code, or image HTML, needs to be placed on the Page by using a wonderfully handy Facebook application known as Static FBML. Install Static FMBL to your Facebook Page by clicking on the "Add to my Page" link.

Step 4.

Head back to your Facebook Page, choose "Edit page" and scroll down your list of applications to the Static FBML app that you just installed. All you need to do is paste the code into the FBML box. Save and your done. You can create as many custom FBML boxes with code as you need and place them on each "tab" within your Facebook Page that you want to track.

For your Facebook Page Wall, just make your FBML application a box and post it to your wall. Just remember that for each tab that you want to track within your Facebook Page, you'll need to create a new "image HTML" as instructed in Step 2.

The benefits of adding Google Analytics to your Facebook Page are tremendous. You'll be able to track:

  • the number of unique visitors on your Page by day, week, month and more
  • new visitors vs. returning visitors
  • what tabs are most popular within your Page
  • what keywords do people use to find your Page
  • overall Page growth (or decline) over a period of time
  • how long are people staying on your Page

Google Analytics can give you a major leg up on understanding more about your visitors so that you can adjust and improve your Facebook Page. This will help you continue efforts that work and alter those that don't.

Do you use Google Analytics on your Facebook Page? Have you found alternative ways to implement other that what's been shared here? Share your thoughts with us.