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How to Use Google Alerts to Boost Your Business
by Donna Gunter

Published on this site: May 4th, 2007 - See
more articles from this month

How to Use Google Alerts to Boost Your Business
Google Alerts are a handy little email notification service
provided by Google to let you know when new information in
which you might be interested has been posted somewhere
online and spidered by the Google searchbot. It's a
no-cost way for you to determine what's been written online
about both you and your competition, as well as to track
any number of other terms that will aid you in your market
research efforts. You can also use this system as a way to
research market trends and market statistics and determine"what's hot" in your target market to give you topic ideas
for future articles, blog posts, and product and service
offerings.
Here's how to set up and use your Google Alerts account:
- Brainstorm a list of terms and keywords you want to
track.
You list should include the following: your name,
your company's name, names of your products or programs,
the name and/or company name of your competitors, keyword
terms pertinent in your industry or to your business, names
of "moves and shakers" in your industry, and names of
potential joint venture/strategic alliance partners
Don't worry about brainstorming absolutely everything in
this step. Google Alerts makes it simple to add additional
alerts as you need them.
- Create a Google account.
You can do so at http://www.google.com/alerts by following the sign in
links, which will eventually bring you to a page where you
create a new Google account. If you already use Gmail or
some other Google service, you should be able to sign in to
Google Alerts using that account info.
- Create your alerts.
Sign in to your Google account and
begin to create your alerts.
Here's how to create the most
effective alerts:
- Use quotation marks to surround your term, like"marketing coach". By doing so, Google will alert you to
only those pages making reference to this particular term.
- Choose the once-a-day alert which you can then review at
the start of each day. Once a week is too seldom, and
getting them as they happen will overwhelm you with email.
- Choose the most thorough search option, the Comprehensive
option, in which Google searches the news, websites,
blogs, and groups.
- Add additional alerts later.
I like to see where the
info that I write ends up. Because I write a new article
each week and submit it to article banks, I enter the
article title as a Google alert to be notified when it's
placed on someone's site or blog. I also add other keywords
that I think searchers might use to find my site to see if
my site is listed when it comes to those terms as well as
to see what other sites come up by using those terms.
- Scan the results.
The amount of email that you receive
will dramatically increase when you sign up for Google
Alerts, so create a filter or rule in your email program to
move all the alerts to a special folder for later viewing
rather than clogging up your email inbox. Briefly scan the
results and more thoroughly read the listings that appear
to be most relevant. Because Google Alerts now searches
blogs, many of the blog postings noted in your alert will
look nonsensical because many bloggers have created blogs
of keyword-crammed entries that are completely meaningless
for you. Unfortunately, if do much marketing online, it's
only a matter of time until your name, company name, or
name of an article that you've written appears on someone's
keyword-crammed blog.
Google Alerts are the most cost-effective market research
you can use to help you grow your business. If you don't
have a Google alerts account, what's stopping you?

Donna Gunter: Online Business Resource Queen (TM) and Online Business
Coach Donna Gunter helps self-employed service
professionals learn how to automate their businesses,
leverage their expertise on the Internet, and get more
clients online. To claim your free gift, TurboCharge Your
Online Marketing Toolkit, visit her site at http://www.GetMoreClientsOnline.com. Ask Donna an
Internet Marketing question at. http://www.AskDonnaGunter.com.


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