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How and Why You Must Do Competitive Research

Competitive Research

The term competitive research often conjures up notions of spying and espionage, but the fact is, you must commit to ongoing competitive research as a way to grow and evolve.

When I talk about the concept of competitive research as a core practice, I sometimes encounter some pushback from business owners. The reality is many people can’t identify direct competitors in part because they aren’t paying attention.

Competitors come in all shapes and sizes and, in some cases, aren’t in your town or even in your industry.

You see, when it comes to digital competition a core competitor might not be someone who gets the job you just bid on, it might just as likely be a business you’ve never heard of that ranks well for the type of terms you need to rank for. Or, it might be an advertiser that does such a great job with the relevance of their ads that they are forcing your ad bids higher than they should be.

If you think of competitive research not simply as a way to get one up on a competitor, but as a way to grow and learn and discover, you might make it a priority.

For me ongoing competitive research contains a few of the following benefits:

The key to consistent competitive research is to equip yourself with both a routine for conducting it and a set of tools that make it easy for you to do – sometimes even on the fly.

Below you’ll find the four primary categories of competitive research along with a few of my favorite tools for setting up and conducting your competitive research plan.

Alerts

The ability to receive an email alert when any company, brand,  or person is mentioned online had made it very simple to keep up on your mentions and opportunities as well as mentions of a competitor. I get a daily digest of mentions and quite often find ways to engage sites that are doing the mentioning.

As a competitive research play, you can set up relevant alerts and know when a competitor makes an announcement or what someone points out an opportunity related to a competitor

Online Advertising

To get the biggest bang for your online ad spend you have to target the right keywords with the right message. Using tools that help you understand what keywords and messages are the most profitable, is a great way to maximize your online ad budget.

Content

Content research is an awesome habit to get into! It helps you build a plan for your content that is based on reaching certain traffic objectives. One of the easiest ways to find content ideas is to understand what content is already ranking for search terms you covet and then find out why.

SEO

If one of your goals is to figure out how to get more organic search traffic, then you’ll benefit from understanding how sites that rank above you are doing so. If you can understand how a page that ranks is optimized and what other sites of authority link to a site then you can stand a chance of matching them for your important keywords. Sure, you’ll still have to work at it, but at least you’ll have the roadmap.

All-in-one
There are some all-in-one type of solutions as well. One that we love to use is called RivalIQ. This is a great tool if you have a need to show clients a competitive landscape. And, of course, MOZ Pro and Raven Tools are great all in one tool with some nice local tools.

Google Operators

I love Google Operators as another handy search power tool. There are many useful ways to refine your search through operators, but the following three are the ones I use the most.

Chrome Extensions

Finally, while many of these tools are great when doing research intentional, there are some great Chrome Extensions that keep competitive research front and center as you surf. When you add any of these tools to your browser you can get quick competitive data for every page you visit. Here are my favorites.

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