Get insights from American Express to help inform business decisions.
americanexpress.com/bizinsights
Competitor strengths/weaknesses? We can establish what they are!
www.Research-Insight.com
Find out what the rest of your team already knows about the competition
www.SavoGroup.com
Primary Competitive Intelligence Get information from the source
www.fletchercsi.com
Free Trial -- We help build great queries and find sources you want!
www.nexcerpt.com
Due diligence, litigation support, fraud & internal investigations
www.marquetinternational.com
Advanced tools for corporate professionals from Thomson Reuters.
financial.thomsonreuters.com
See Competitors and All Connections Visualization and Analysis Software
www.TheBrain.com
Watch your competitors' ppc ads for changes in rank, copy, market share
www.thesearchmonitor.com
Get insights from American Express to help inform business decisions.
americanexpress.com/bizinsights
Outlines the general research interests for people conducting competitive intelligence and identifies applicable library and Web resources.
www.anderson.ucla.edu
A search engine and listing of sites-by-category for finding CI resources.
www.bidigital.com
A collection of links to publications and articles related to competitive intelligence.
www.bpubs.com
Article on tips and techniques on Internet intelligence-gathering.
www.freepint.co.uk
Article examines the various types of information required for competitive intelligence activity.
www.infotoday.com
Competitor strengths/weaknesses? We can establish what they are!
www.Research-Insight.com
Online competitive intelligence - gathering and analyzing information about your competitors' online activities - is clearly a hot topic among B2B search marketing professionals competing for the best position in organic and paid search results. In a recent study of Business.com clients, all managing B2B paid search campaigns and/or search engine optimization (SEO) programs, 87% said that it was important or very important to understand how their competitors are marketing themselves online in order to run an effective SEO program; 84% felt the same for pay-per-click search marketing.
Despite the typical knowing-doing gap, where people know what they need to but never get around to actually doing something about it, B2B search marketers are taking online competitive intelligence seriously. We found that 69% were actively monitoring how their competitors market themselves online. This goes well beyond the occasional Google search on top keywords or looking up competitor web site traffic. We defined "actively monitor" as proactively going online to find competitor ads, keywords or other information, and recording what they find for later comparison to see how competitors' online marketing programs change over time. In fact, the median respondent actively monitors four competitors, and 17% of respondents track 10 or more competitors.
The purpose of this guide is to help you, as a B2B search marketer, understand B2B online competitive intelligence practices and tools so that you can improve your search marketing program performance.
Click to download the complete online competitive intelligence whitepaper and follow me on Twitter (http://twitter.com/B2BOnlineMktg) for more competitive intelligence and B2B online marketing advice.
Action Steps
The best contacts and resources to help you get it done
Identify the competitors you want to track.
Include the usual set you watch in the offline world, but also search relevant keywords on general search engines. Most B2B search marketers will run campaigns on at least one of the 'Big 3' and you may find one or more upstart competitors with very aggressive search marketing campaigns. Make sure to add these to your competitor list as well.
I recommend: Search Google, Yahoo or Microsoft Live (or try SpyFu for fast, albeit outdated, overview of top sites competing with you for organic and paid search rankings).
Think broadly about search.
Your goal is to know what your competitors are doing wherever your target audience is searching online, and a large portion of the searchable business Internet exists beyond general search engines.
I recommend: Include Google, Yahoo and Microsoft Live to cover where your audience is likely to start when they become aware of a basic business need. Also consider leading specialized business search engine and directory sites such as Business.com (general business directory), GlobalSpec (engineering directory) and ThomasNet (manufacturing directory).
Establish your baseline.
Start with competitor web sites, decide what metric(s) and keyword you want to track, and establish an initial baseline. Conduct an initial SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) analysis of your search marketing programs against at least five competitors.
I recommend: For unique visitors per month, try free tools such as Compete or Alexa, or more full-featured (and expensive) options such as comScore or Nielsen//Netratings. For online market share by industry, try Hitwise. Trellian's Competitive Intelligence tool will give you keyword traffic data for competitor sites.
Develop an expertise in keyword research.
The B2B search marketers in our recent study picked keyword selection - both for SEO and paid search - as the #1 way competitor activities influence their search marketing programs.
I recommend: Use keyword research tools from Hitwise Search Intelligence, Trellian's KeywordDiscovery, WordTracker or AdGooroo.
Get to know your competitors' sites.
Your competitors' search marketing ROI, and ability to outspend or outperform you, depends not only on the sites on which they advertise but also their ability to convert clicks and visitors into customers. Get to know their site and broader online marketing practices.
I recommend: Learn more about improving online conversions. Work.com guides such as this one from Lindsey Walsh about increasing website conversions are a good place to start.
Swap war stories.
Meet other search marketers at major industry events, and share best practices.
I recommend: Attend Search Engine Strategies and Search Insider Summit or new events such as SMX, Online Marketing Summit, Online Market World and more.
Reduce the 'noise'.
When you're tracking competitor search marketing programs and metrics, you want to make sure you accurately capture cause and effect relationships. You don't want, for example, to attribute a spike in unique visitors to a competitor site to a change in their search marketing programs when they just launched a major banner campaign.
I recommend: Keep track of competitor banner ad campaigns. Also, set-up automated email alerts through Google News and create a watchlist on Technorati to easily receive summaries of news and blog posts that mention your competitors and their products.
Keep up-to-date on competitor activities.
Just like you, your competitors are continually making changes to their search marketing programs in the pursuit of better performance.
I recommend: See our complete B2B online competitive intelligence Solution Guide for more details on how frequently B2B marketers monitor competitor site traffic, keywords and rankings.


