So, friends, let me introduce you to the free, easy to set up, automatically updating brand monitoring dashboard that I created with iGoogle and a slew of RSS feeds.
Here's a screenshot:

Noooo, I can't enlarge it. Because I know there are moles out there reading my blog, which is why I have this damn thing in the first place. TROLLS! I KNOW YOU'RE OUT THERE!
But what I can do is tell you how I set it up so you can have one too. It's not as complicated as it looks!
There are 5 categories on our dashboard:
- Brand - mentions of your name, including acronyms, misspellings, etc
- Current - issues that people are talking about that involve you right now
- Detractors - people you know don't like you but talk about you
- Competition - people in the same space as you
- Staff - prominent people in your org, like your CEO
- Google Alerts - I hope you know what they are and are already using them!
- Filtrbox - a paid monitoring service to make sure we catch everything
- Tweetmeme - tells you the most popular tweets about a subject
- Twitter Search - shows tweets containing a certain keyword (we don't use this anymore because we use Tweetdeck separately)
- Technorati - shows blogs that mention certain keywords
- Blogpulse - another blog monitoring tool
- Digg - shows most popular articles on the web
- Boardreader - shows forum posts by keyword
Here's how to get started:
- Start with a blank iGoogle page.
- Choose the 3 column layout.
- Open a new browser window. Do a search on Technorati for your org name. You'll see a "subscribe" link. Click on it.
4. A window in Google Reader should open. Copy the feed URL in the top left corner.
5. Go back to iGoogle, and click on add stuff > add feed or gadget.
6. Paste the URL into the box and save.
7. You'll be taken back to your iGoogle page, where you should see a new box with the content from Technorati mentioning your org name.
8. Repeat these steps for each site, then each tab.
Our dashboard has anything with our acronym in the first column and anything with our name in the second column. The third column has important content from the org like our blog, our Twitter feed, and our press releases RSS feed. This acts as a resource for the people who view the dashboard… they see what people are talking about, and what we (as an org) are talking about, side-by-side.
Hope that helps some of you and good luck!
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My name is Carie, and I'm an animal advocate by day, and a fun-loving outdoor enthusiast / pet mom by night. My blog talks about my experiences using social media and provides real tips and takeaways you can apply in your work.





3 comments:
Thank you for this-what a great tip! I toohave no budget for fancy monitoring but this is a great way to compile all of the data in one place!
You SO rock1
I can't wait to try this out ... Thanks for sharing such great information at our Social Media Conference!
Nicely done. we do a similiar implementation for some clients where we don't want to introduce netvibes or yahoo pipes. A great cross funtionality of igoogle is adding additional tabs: one for content ditribution, with friendfeed, ping.fm, twitter, facebook and other widegets ( I suggest adding feeds for certain Q&A threads on linkedin). A third for topical feeds that can give audience value that you want to send out. http://www.alltop.com category feeds via rss to an igoogle tab are great for this.
I think a lot around the idea of making dashboards effective for the execution of social media marketing and community building tools as well as brand, campaiogn or reputation monitoring. what are the best tools? how does this interact with life streaming ("value streaming") workflow?
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