Who Knows More about Your Website than You? These Guys.

This wonderful website, HypeStat.com, can tell you quite a bit about your web traffic. Or your competitors’ sites. Free. They don’t even want your email or name.

Just go to their page, toss a large company’s url in it and see how it works. The biggies have the traffic to activate all the charts you’ll see, but even the smallest site can be examined in text detail.

Hypestat.com aggregates several other web services I’ll discuss in the next few posts: Compete.com, Alexa.com, Quantcast.com, SEMRush.com, and Google Maps.

It’s just one of many free quick-analysis sites, but it’s a cool one.

Google Buzz

Whoopsra

Sorry folks, I tossed yet a fifth analytics package into the stack and lost most of the site for the last few hours. Good software, bad me.

If it happens again, it’s just temporary – gotta experiment on cool stuff:  Woopra

“…is the world’s most comprehensive, information rich, easy to use, real-time Web tracking and analysis application.”

Great interface, upcoming iPhone app: The First Sneak Peak at the Woopra iPhone App

Jon Byous

Google Buzz

Find Customers Faster (Coming Soon)

Here’s ten minutes of inspiration video for mobile app developers and marketers: Anonymized census-level user data reporting.

This light, upbeat video from comScore gives us a glimpse at the awesome customer data we’ll soon be able to access. It’s a big step in finding your most profitable customers.

GSMA Mobile Media Metrics (MMM): Next Generation Media Measurement for Mobile

Google Buzz

TwitterMining, Level 2

Here’s a light-weight two-step process for taking a dip in Twitter data.

I’ll start with the second step first (visualization), then describe one approach for finding who to visualize (metrics).

Visualize the Relationships Between Tweeters of Interest: Mentionmap

Click to open the Mentionmap web app, give it a moment to load, type in your favorite Twitter username and hit Start. They offer some examples. Robert Scoble or Padmasree (Cisco’s CTO) are good.

After it loads and adjusts, you’ll see a constellation map of connected Tweeters in realtime – tribes, influence groups, connections between groups. These folks pay attention to each other. As the instructions say, “Click on a node to explore its neighborhood,” and watch the constellation move around to reveal new connections. You can see the Tweeter’s id, name, location, and bio in the box at the left.

Find your fans and their friends, or your competitors and their customers, or just chase down the most active people connected to your interest topics. (The “#” in front of some names is called a “hashtag,” and it represents a group. Click on one of these and you’ll usually see a lot of connected and active people.)

Where Do I Find My Fans, Competitors, and Groups?

Among the many options, I like the analytics approach of ViralHeat.com. I’ll review others later. For now, hit the ViralHeat.com site, take a glance at their overall theme, and then go to the Social Trends tab at the top.

The Social Trends page offers 35 of the top user names across seven categories – glam stuff, not really biz. Better yet, write in the name of your company or a popular competitor. They don’t really show you much of the subscription capabilities here, but you’ll learn who the most active Tweeter in your category is, on this page. Then, take that username, plug it into Mentionmap above, and start clicking around. There’s lots to learn.

Now, for a specific dive on your tribe or company or competitors, the ViralHeat site doesn’t do itself justice. I subscribe to the $9.99 /month service to get email delivery updates on the day’s Tweet metrics and specifics every morning. It’s worth it to me to see these two page formats whenever I want to go hunting:

Viralheat | Profile dashboard for #Oraclesun_1265166953372

Viralheat | Twitter dashboard for #Oraclesun_1265167020194

Look at all the info here, especially on the second page.

That’s a good start, with lots of paths to explore.

More later. SocialMention.com comin’ up.

Google Buzz

TwitterMining, Level I

“More than half of the Fortune 100 companies are using Twitter for customer service, recruiting employees, blasting news and announcing promotions, according to the study by public relations firm Burson-Marsteller and its digital-media unit, Proof.”

USA TODAY  Social media like Twitter change customer service Technology 11/18/2009

Google Buzz

We’re Lucky to Have Local Tech Creatives

Young fresh talent is blooming everywhere.

Agencies Need to Think Like Software Companies
Well written by Allison Mooney for Advertising Age – 9.29.09
Adage.com posted this article in their DIGITALNEXT blog. Focus: The role of technical creatives, creative techies, and the value of a constant tweak, change, re-release cycle. It’s a new mindset. The reader comments are great. The last one reverses the article’s title/perspective: maybe software companies need to think like agencies…

Google Buzz