I usually ignore the competition. Watching the other guy can be a distraction, taking my focus off the important things like taking care of clients and sharing my best advice.
But analysing competitor websites can quickly give you ideas for your own web marketing. Of course, you can’t see their Analytics, but there are lots of free competitor analysis tools that will give you fast and valuable insights.
Here are 14 competitive analysis tools that you can use to compare your website to the other guys in many ways: search optimisation, digital advertising, social media, traffic and technology.
Here we’ll list them alphabetically, but you can see they have overlapping features. They all have free tools and more powerful paid versions. We’ve also shown how to do competitive analysis with each in the detailed descriptions below.
Let’s break down each type of analysis. They each represent different aspects of digital marketing and criteria for evaluating websites.
Key phrases and Search Engine Rankings
What do they rank for? What battles are they winning? And are we even in those same fights?
Seeing what your competitors rank for and how high will immediately give you ideas for content and key phrases. Without using a tool, the only way to find this information would be to search for every conceivable key phrase.
Pay Per Click and Digital Advertising
What phrases are they bidding on? Where are they investing their ad budgets? What do their ads look like?
Similar to organic rankings, watching a competitor’s ad spending will give you insights into what might be a good investment for you. Assuming they have well-managed, well-optimized campaigns, you can see which words and phrases are getting traction with your target audience.
Authority and Link Popularity
How famous and trustworthy is their website? Are their pages more likely to rank than ours? Who can target the more competitive phrases?
The next level of SEO competitive analysis is all about links. Sites with links from many other websites have higher authority, especially if the links are from sites that have high authority themselves.
The original metric of authority is Google’s own “PageRank” but they no longer share this data. So these tools offer proxy metrics. Beyond the number, you can use these reports to find PR opportunities. If a media site or blog has mentioned and linked to a competitor, it may be a good site to pitch to yourself!
The many sources of link popularity data
There are many tools that track links and provide authority metrics. Each has its own name for the number, but they all essentially measure the same thing: the likelihood of ranking and they all use a scale from 1 – 100.
- MOZ: Domain Authority
- SEMrush: Domain Score
- Alexa: Competitive Power
- Ahrefs: Domain Rating
- Searchmetrics: Page Strength
Social Media
Which of their articles is getting shared the most? Which of their social networks are getting the best results? Who is sharing their content?
Social accounts are easy to watch, but hard to analyse. At a glance, you can see which specific posts are getting engagement, but the big picture is impossible to see without tools.
The insights are very useful and include ideas for what to write about, where to be active and who to collaborate with.
Traffic
If their site more popular than yours? Are they getting more traffic? Are their visitors more engaged?
There are no tools that will give you an accurate look into their Analytics, but there are ways to get website traffic estimates. These tools give you a big picture, top line looks into who is getting more visitors when they visit, demographics and behaviour data.
Technology
What framework is their site built on? Is it WordPress? What tracking tools are they using?
Website technology is surprisingly visible, and there are tools that make it easy to sniff out exactly what’s powering your competitor’s website and what tools and plugins are bolted on. This gives you visibility into what tactics they’re likely using and what might work well for you.
1. SEMrush
Popular and powerful, we have to list this one first. It’s the most recommended SEO tool on Robbie Richard’s survey of top SEOs. SEMrush shows both organic and paid search rankings for any site, mobile or desktop in any country. Just drop in the URL.
Paid users can use advanced filters to find the most important phrases fast. Remove low ranking phrases, low volume phrases and branded phrases. Here’s what the filter will look like:
The paid version also includes site audits, brand tracking and more. The only downside to SEMrush is that it has so many features, it takes a while to find everything!
- Free version: Top ten phrases
- Paid version: $99/month
2. Ahrefs
There is no free version, but you can get a 2-week free trial. Once you’re in, you’ll have access to the largest database of keyphrases of any of these analysis tools: four billion keyphrases. This is definitely a power user tool with many features beyond keyphrase tracking. Not surprising it’s #2 on Robbie’s leaderboard.
Considering targeting a phrase? Ahrefs provides detailed reports with search volume, projected traffic, competition and SERP analysis.
Ahrefs also includes lots of other reports for tracking keywords and links. These go beyond competitive analysis. These are power tools for serious SEOs. If the search is critical to your company, you likely need these options.
- Free version: 14-day trial
- Paid version: $82/month
3. Alexa
One of the best known competitive metrics and tools for website analysis, Alexa provides a number that some marketers obsess over. The “Alexa Rank” is an estimate of popularity and ranking of every website globally and in every country.
The paid version also has excellent tools for spying on competitors rankings.
One of our favourite reports is the “Audience Overlap Tool” which first tells you which sites you compete with, then it shows you the phrases you’re competing for. It puts everything on a table. The darker table cells show who’s winning. Amazing!
Alexa is also one of the only tools to estimate behaviour data (bounce rate, time on site) and demographics (gender, education levels). No wonder people love it.
- Free version: Unlimited site info reports. 7 day free trial for full toolset
- Paid version: $99/month
4. BuiltWith
What content management system are they using? What are they tracking? Do they use a content delivery network? What plugins are installed? Are they doing retargeting?
This fast, free analysis tool shows you everything that can be learned by analysing the code of the website. It’s a lot of information. Plug in a competitor and instantly see what software and systems they have plugged in. This gives you powerful tools to their marketing strategies.
BuiltWith also has a popular (and free) Chrome extension. Just add it to your browser and see what technology is behind any website with a single click.
- Free version: Unlimited searches for individual site lookups
- Paid version: Starting at $495/month for Pro with unlimited results. $295 for limited results.
5. Buzzsumo
This super popular tool is great for social listening and blog post ideas. But it’s also great for competitive research. Just drop in a competitor website and see their top shared posts on any social network for any date range.
Dig deeper to see who shared it. Buzzsumo tags them as journalists, bloggers and influencers. You can also see who has linked to it. Within seconds you can see who is paying attention to your competitors and which of their topics get the most love.
- Free version: Top five results
- Paid version: $99/month
6. FollowerWonk
It only analyses Twitter, but FollowerWonk is one of the best for quick analysis. It shows you where the followers are for any account, what time of day they are active, how influential a following is, etc.
In the “compare users” view, you can measure the overlap between any two accounts. It also shows you which of the accounts is growing more quickly.
- Free version: Free for personal use
- Paid version: See MOZ below
7. iSpionage
You’ll need to create an account even to use the free version. But Ispionage does a very nice job of grouping the phrases together with the corresponding page.
It also shows trends, rather than just a huge list of phrases. This makes it easy to do the analysis when you’re competing for a small number of high-value phrases. See every “money phrase” their top pages rank for!
It’s also easy to see what phrases that competitor website is bidding on and how those bids have changed over time.
- Free version: There isn’t a free version, but their money back guarantee is good for 30 days for first-time users if you don’t exceed 1,000 downloads
- Paid version: $29/month and up
8. Majestic SEO
Majestic has two metrics that indicate the credibility of a domain: “trust flow” and “citation flow.” The latter is probably more relevant and accurate for most comparisons.
The compare view will show you your site and anyone else’s side-by-side.
Are you lagging behind in Citation Flow? Get busy doing outreach, PR and guest blogging. But first, write something worth linking to.
- Free version: They limit the daily usage for free version
- Paid version: $52/month
9. Moat
If you know that a competitor is using display ads, this tool is a fast way to see the creativity of all of their ads, all at once. Just enter the brand name and click search.
This will instantly give you ideas on what kind of design and messaging might work well for you. Make sure to check the more sophisticated brands, since they are more likely to be testing for engagement and optimising.
- Free version: see display ads
- Paid version: see placement, impressions, video ads, etc. Price negotiable.
10. MOZ / Open Site Explorer
It’s a popular and powerful SEO tool with all kinds of useful reports. The one most relevant to competitive analysis is Open Site Explorer. This is probably the most famous tool for measuring link popularity. They use the term “Domain Authority” for their metric.
It’s super easy to use. Just put on your site to see your Domain Authority, then put in a competitor. Or use the “Compare Link Metrics” tool. The site with the higher authority is more likely to rank for more competitive phrases.
A few notes: Domain Authority will naturally fluctuate over time. Also, keep in mind that ultimately, it is pages that rank in Google, not domains. So the “Page Authority” of the specific pages is even more important. To better understand this tool, read How to Increase Domain Authority.
- Free version: 3 searches/day for Open Site Explorer
- Paid version: $99/month
11. Quantcast
The paid version of Quantcast provides demographics, behaviours and lifestyle data about visitors across websites and apps. It’s a popular tool. 15% of the top marketing websites use the Quantcast tracking tag.
The free version doesn’t give you much. But it does show traffic estimates. You’ll need to create an account, then you can see estimated traffic levels for any website in their system.
- Free version: Basic traffic levels
- Paid version: Negotiable
12. SimilarWeb
This is one of the oldest and most trusted traffic estimators. Similar to Alexa, it ranks sites globally and nationally by traffic. It also puts each website into a category and shows a category rank.
The free version is very easy to use. It only shows the top five ranking keyphrases, so it’s not ideal for SEO comparisons. But it does show the top referring websites, which is not available in any other tool.
- Free version: 5 results per metric and 3 months of traffic data
- Paid version: Unlimited metrics, cost is negotiable
13. Searchmetrics
It’s very easy to jump in and see the top phrases for any site. You can see the top five without creating an account (not very useful) or the top ten with a free account (much better). The paid version will show you everything.
Reports are very easy to read and include PPC competitive metrics and social media competition. You’ll also find detailed information about trends and the performance of specific pieces of content.
- Free version: Top five phrases for any domain
- Paid version: $69/month
14. SpyFu
This tool makes deeper analysis very easy. Find top organic competitors and see which phrases are ranking on page one (as well as which ones just barely made it or just fell off). There’s also a “Kombat” feature that makes it easy to compare. It’s very simple to find insights in SpyFu.
Beyond keywords, Spyfu also tracks links and PPC advertising. This is a complete tool for tracking your competitors and yourself.
- Free version: Unlimited searches with limited data
- Paid version: Starts at $33/month
When to do this kind of competitive analysis
These are the times when checking out the competition is especially useful:
- When starting a web-based business
- When starting a website redesign project
- Twice a year or so, just because (put it on your calendar!)
There you have it. Fourteen tools to snoop on the competition. Don’t pay too much attention to the other guys, but never miss a chance to find the data that can help you make better decisions.
Source: Orbit Media Studios