Using Google Alerts to Monitor Incoming Links

Image of Incoming linksDo you monitor the incoming links in your dashboard? Have they been confusing you or making you a bit frustrated lately?

How about I tell you what’s happening and provide a few possible solutions.

About Incoming Links

Inside your dashboard you have an Incoming Links Widget that shows all the blogs that are linking to your blog.

Image of incoming widget

Experienced bloggers rely heavily on these incoming links to find people who are citing their blog or name. The idea is you follow the link, see what’s be written and why, and choose if you want to engage in a conversation (by leaving a comment or writing a post). This is important for building relationships, conversations and your blog community.

Unfortunately the incoming links widget in our dashboard uses Google Blog Search and at the moment Google Blog Search is broken. Normally Google Blog Search indexes blog posts that link to your post or blog however it is now indexing all blogs that include links to your blog in its sidebar.

This means when ever a person writes a post and your blog is included as a link in their sidebar (e.g. their blog roll, recent comments) you will receive a new link in your incoming links widget. If they write 3 posts that day, without even citing your blog in their post, you will receive a new link. While it might be nice; it’s not helpful.

Hopefully this issue with Google Blog Search will be resolved soon but in the meantime here is one option.

Google Alerts

Google Alerts is an automatic notification system that advise you by email or RSS when it finds new items on web pages that match your search criteria.

Bloggers frequently use it to find people who cite their name or blog. The benefit of Google Alerts is it picks up all those posts where the bloggers have forgotten to include the link and only used your blog/name.

How to set up a Google AlertImage of Even more

  1. Go to Google
  2. Click on More and then select Even More
  3. Click on Alerts
  4. Enter the Search term, choose whether to receive notification by email or RSS and then click Create Alert

Image of creating a google alert

Here is what an email from Google Alerts looks like:

Image of a google alert

FINAL THOUGHTS

As a blogger it’s a good idea to use Google Alerts for picking up those posts where people mention your name or blog but forgot to link.   My next post will provide another option for monitoring incoming links.

Are you currently using Google Alerts?  And what do you use it for?

If you are enjoying reading this blog, please consider Subscribing For Free!

Why Does Technorati Still Mock Me?

Why me? I’ve been good (mostly). And yet Technorati doesn’t like me and has been mocking (driven me crazy) all weekend! Friends are meant to play nicely aren’t they?

Admittedly people might question why care if Technorati likes you. To be honest, I don’t, except:

  • There are bloggers who prefer to read posts by subscribing to technorati tags than to subscribing to individual blogs.
  • People use blog search engines to locate blogs worth reading.
  • RSS feed from a technorati tag can be used to collect posts when a group uses a common tag

Using RSS from a technorati tag to bring posts by groups is a powerful feature which can be used to bring all posts written by the group to one location to be easily located and read. e.g. Comment Challenge participants are tagging their posts comment08 and latest posts written by participants are automatically added to one central location on the wiki plus they can add the RSS feed from the tag to their feed reader e.g. Google Reader, Bloglines, NetVibes.

As a blogger it’s important to optimise your blog visibility so your posts are easily found on Technorati.

About Technorati

Technorati and Google Blog Search are both search engines used for searching keyword (i.e. tag) or category used to describe the subject matter or topic of a blog post. Technorati is generally better at locating posts than Google Blog Search.

If you want your blog to appear in technorati blog search directory and your posts to be found in their searches you need to join Technorati and then claim your blog.

technorati.jpg

Below is an example of how your blog will look to others once you have claimed your blog.

mobiletech.jpg

Authority is the number of blogs linking to your website in the last six months. The higher the number, the more Technorati Authority your blog has. Technorait measures the number of blogs, rather than the number of links. So, if a blog links to your blog many times, it still only count as +1 toward your authority.

The blog with the highest Technorati Authority is the #1 ranked blog. Your Rank is calculated based on how far you are from the top ranking blog. The smaller your Technorati Rank, the closer you are to the top.

Searching Technorati

You can do a basic search or an advanced search on Technorati. As most people use basic search and since technorati’s basic search searches for the keywords within posts it’s a good idea to include keywords, and variations of keywords, when writing your post (provided it doesn’t detract from readability).

For example if I wrote a post about mlearning I may include words like mobile learning, m-learning and mobile technologies within the text of my post. Unfortunately Technorati doesn’t recognise words like m-learning as a search term and this needs to be written as mlearning.

You can subscribe to the RSS feed from technorati searches using your feed reader or add the RSS feed to another site e.g. like we have done with the Comment Challenge wiki. We’ve needed to refine our searches to capture more posts.

technoratisearches.jpg

This refined search was used for adding the RSS feed from the comment08 tag to our wiki so participants can check latest posts.

rss-wiki-feed.jpg

The better option for a group to receive latest posts is to subscribe to the RSS feed from technorati using their feed reader.

technoratigr.jpg

What We Need You To Do For The Comment Challenge

Encouraging the community aspect is an important part of the Comment Challenge. We need for all posts from the Challenge to be included in the RSS feed from Technorati so participants can easily find each other and interact. With over 100 adult participants and 8 student groups (over 200 students) technorati is the most efficient method of bringing together all posts.

For all adult participants we need you to:

  1. If you are recording your reflections on a blog — Join and claim your blog at Technorati
  2. If you have a blog already claimed on technorati — can you please log into Technorati and ping your blog (some of your blogs haven’t accessed posts from your blog for 90 days which means we won’t see any of the posts you are writing).pingtechnorati.jpg
  3. Tag all posts written for the Challenge using comment08 – refer to instructions on the challenge wiki.
  4. Add the RSS feed from the technorati comment08 tag to your Feed Reader (preferably Google Reader so that you can do a search of this RSS feed using Google Reader to make sure your posts are included).
  5. If you aren’t blogging your learning journey but are recording them using another online tool please add it’s location to your participants details. If you want to set up your own blog go here to create your blog for free! (here’s our Getting Started with Edublogs page with lots of “How to” manuals and videos to get you going).
  6. Refer to this information for how to tag comments you write during this Challenge.

This is how you tag your posts if you use Edublogs.

For student participants please:

  1. Don’t use comment08 tag with your student — instead use the tag studentcomment08
  2. Liaise with the other teachers in the challenge to coordinate your activities.

FINAL THOUGHTS

If you’re wondering why technorati drove me crazy this weekend — it has taken me considerable time to realise all the different reasons why all posts weren’t being found. Hopefully this information helps you understand how to use technorati better.

If you are enjoying reading this blog, please consider Subscribing For Free!