From the category archives:

Blog rank

Google Alerts is like looking into the mind of Google. It is Google’s way of telling you which items it has just recognized as worthy of reporting back to you for a specific search term. When you receive an alert, you know that Google is paying extra attention to that page. These are the pages that PR people should focus on for commenting, and where  SEOs should try to create a backlink.

AlertRank gives you tools to look beneath individual alerts and reveal the sites that Google finds most appealing. This is done with AlertRanks’ source listing page. It summarizes all the sources for alerts on any topic. Here is an example source listing for the following search term:
(”social media” OR “social network” OR “twitter”) site:edu

Google Alerts sources

I can use this to see which sites with a .edu domain Google thinks are most authoritative for social media terms. These make great targets for comments and backlinks, since Google considers .edu domains much less spammy.

To narrow things down even more, I can have AlertRank limit the sources to those with the highest AlertRank quality score, and then sort the results by their commenting options. This gives me a list of high ranking .edu sites that allow comments. It’s like aiming an X-ray scanner directly into Google’s brain.

Google Alerts sources close-up

Related Posts

{ 0 comments }

AlertRank is a Google Alerts add-on, so it isn’t meant to replace Google Alerts completely, but it does perform some of Google’s functions a lot better. One clear case in the RSS feed. Google Alerts delivers a separate feed for each alert, which can be a real pain to follow in a reader, if you have a lot of alert search terms. The feed content is basically the same as the Google Alerts email.

feed2

AlertRank combines all your alerts into a single RSS feed, making it much more convenient to share with others and to read in a feed reader. There is also additional information in the feed content to make it easier to tell which alerts you need to respond to right away.

AlertRank RSS feed

If you click the link in the feed to ” View additional details,” a page on the AlertRank.com site appears with even more background data on this alert and its source.

feed31

Related Posts

{ 0 comments }