5 Free Tools For Serious Webmasters

The title “webmaster” gets thrown around loosely these days. Every blogger who has their own personalblog.blogspot/wordpress/blogger/tumblr.com that they update once a year considers themselves to be a webmaster in the loosest terms imaginable.

These “webmasters” don’t care about conversions, click through rates, rankings, backlinks, domain authority, mobile performance, or a host of other statistics that help to determine the health and performance of a website. If you are serious about your site and want it to perform well then learn to love these tools that help to diagnose and gauge your websites performance as well as tailoring it to fit your audience’s needs.

#1: Google Analytics

The big bad voodoo daddy of free tools for webmasters is without a doubt Google Analytics. This immensely powerful tool gives you a wide range of data to work with that can show you exactly where you need improvements in your site, or what you can better focus on. Exploring everything that Google Analytics can help you with and the different ways it can be applied could challenge War and Peace for length, but here are a few of the most powerful features on this free tool.

Audience Tracking

While GA will not tell you particulars about specific visitors, it is great at showing you trends. See how your audience is finding your site, how many are returning vs. new visitors, if they’re viewing on mobile, and a host of other stats. For developing sites, one of the most useful tools through audience tracking is the Visitor Flow feature.

instantShift - Visitor Flow

As you can see, this breaks down visitors by demographic (geography in this case) and then shows what landing page they arrived on, and where they went on the site. More importantly, it shows how many “Drop Offs” each page has. A high drop off can inform you to broken links or pages, poor content, and more. Fixing these problem areas can immediately increase your sites performance.

Traffic Sources

This is a very wide category within GA, but it provides the meat of what many webmasters focus in on. As you can guess, this breaks down where your traffic is coming from in these areas:

instantShift - Traffic Sources

These categories can help you to manage your SEO performance, ad campaigns, and social media profiels which helps you to determine where you need to focus your efforts and just how effective your ad campaigns are.

If you don’t read any farther, then at least activate Google Analytics and explore it for half an hour. No free service is as easy to use and offers up such a scope of information to help you better improve your sites performance. More likely than not, once the tool is up and running you’ll be sucked in for hours at a time.

#2: Moonsy

While it may not look as pretty as Google Analytics, Moonsy is a great simple tool to help you check up on a wide range of schematics, especially if you’re looking into other domains and competitors. From the top toolbar you can use these handy (and free) features just to highlight a few. To note: no imagination was spared in the naming of these tools.

  • Backlinks Checker: With no frills this tool quickly tells you the total number of backlinks pointing towards the URLof your choosing. While you won’t be able to break down the backlinks into specific domains or other pieces of information.
  • Domain Age: Quickly check how old a specific domain is. Are you being outranked by competitors with poorer content and low backlinks? Well maybe the domain has been around since 1992 and it is commanding its own presence.
  • Domain Owner: Need to contact the webmaster for one reason or another? Or do you suspect a domain has a big backer behind it? Check it out with the domain owner feature and find out who’s behind it all.
  • Domain Authority: If you hadn’t already heard, Domain Authority is the best way to measure a sites weight. If you’re already checking metrics on Moonsy, it can give you an up to date report on the site’s domain authority as well.
  • Page Authority: Rather than getting a sense of how the entire domain is doing, you can focus in and check a single page. These two metrics are taken from SEOmoz and can give a large insight into why a certain page or domain is performing like it is.

To be clear, this tool is not going to blow you away with its beautiful design or ease of use. However, the information it provides and houses in one place makes up for most of these faults. Moonsy really shines when matched up with the next tool on the list…

#3: Open Site Explorer

As just mentioned above, Domain Authority and Page Authority are a metric that SEOmoz has come up with, and the SEO giant also offers Open Site Explorer as a very powerful link metric tool. Designed to compare competing sites, you can run up to three basic reports a day if you haven’t paid for the service – which is why this is ranking below Moonsy on this list.

You can enter up to five URLs at a time but for this example we’ll look at Buzzfeed, Mashable, and – of course –instantShift.

instantShift - Open Site Explorer

What this tells us is that, between the three, Mashable has the best chance of a higher ranking in Google’s search engine result pages because of its higherMozRank, MozTrust, External Followed Links, Total External Links, Followed Linking Root Domains, Total Linking Root Domains, and Linking C Blocks. Granted, putting instantShift into the ring against Mashable and Buzzfeed doesn’t make a whole lot of sense, but think about comparing your site to your ranking competitors for your desired search terms. You can get a great sense as to why your competitor’s pages are ranking like they are, and can then try to emulate their success to push them out of the top spot.

While Open Site Explorer may be one of the most powerful tools on the list (depending on your needs, it’s a tossup between it and Google Analytics), it falls below Moonsy due to one key aspect. In order to unlock its full potential you need to pay a monthly fee. Many webmasters find it worth the cost, but that doesn’t mean you will. Even with its limited scope as a free tool it still manages to be very helpful and offers a great overview of what is happening on and off your domain.

#4: GoMo

“More Americans have smartphones than passports.” This is one of the statistics that GoMo shows you while you wait to see what your website looks like on a smartphone. The mobile trend is growing as smartphones become the norm. The baby-boomers are becoming more tech literate and there are more tweens tweeting from their smartphones every day. Becoming mobile friendly is more important than ever, especially if you’re trying to catch the local consumer’s eye.

instantShift - GoMo

GoMo allows you to quickly and easily see what your site will look like when viewed from a smartphone, and you can quickly determine if you need to make changes or incorporate a mobile design. For example, this is the example that GoMo showed for instantShift’s homepage.

As you can see, instandShift has done a good job of keeping their mobile layout simple and user friendly with large enough text to read without trouble. This is not the case for many websites that may look great from a web browser, but suffer from small text, broken images and videos, and unwieldy interfaces that do not respond well to big thumbs trying to click on small links. This is doubly true for sites that implement a lot of Javascript or Flash. While they may look great, getting them to work on a smartphone is another issue.

So if your site comes back and looks like something that needs a microscope in order to be seen and you dodecide that a mobile friendly platform is the way to go, well GoMo can help you out. GoMo will link you to a directory where you can find developers that specialize in creating mobile friendly platforms. Getting this process started may have to be your next big step for your sites longevity. Tablets and phones are only getting bigger pieces of the pie and the trend doesn’t look like it will slow down any time soon.

#5: Validator

Nothing kills a site’s performance faster than broken links. Users have a frustrating experience trying to navigate a site and will be hard pressed to return which results in lower conversion. And, sometimes more importantly, if you rely on search engines for the bulk of your traffic you could experience a huge hit if you have a plethora of broken links. Search engines rely on internal and external links to not only index your sites pages, but to tell how well your website is built and how much care is taken. If your site has too many broken links, expect to see a drop in your rankings.

With that being said, Validator is a great way to find, fix, or remove these broken areas of a site. Not only does Validator find broken links, but it also searches out broken code that can affect all different parts of a website; from comment tabs, images, to text font. Validator does this by searching through your page’s code and finding errors that need to be addressed. While most sites are based around HTML/XHTML, Validator can read and find errors in most markup languages.

Better yet, Validator offers a number of ways to do this. The quickest way is to simply check with the pages URL code, but you can also upload your sites files, or by directly inputting the code. This means you can find use with Validator in every part of website development, and you can even use it for broken link building strategies.

Wrapping It Up

If you want to bring your site to the next level then it is in your best interest to utilize the tools that are at your disposal. Not doing so can leave you in the dark as to exactly what is working within your site and what needs to change in order to increase traffic and conversions. Incredibly strong tools like Google Analytics are only limited to how you use them, while tools like Validator and GoMo offer niche services that can’t be passed up.

Looking beyond just the inner workings of your site, Open Site Explorer offers not only free competitor analysis, but a way to track your link building efforts and weight of your domain. However, the free service through Open Site Explorer is very limited since it only gives you three searches per day. This is great if you’re just checking in every now and then, but if you’re trying to get to the bottom of your rankings you’ll burn through this in no time flat.

This is when tools like Moonsy come into service. It may look incredibly basic, and a bit cumbersome to use, but with it you can gleam most of the information that Open Site Explorer charges for. Granted, it’s not presented in an easy to read table and graphs, but it works in a pinch if you’re not wanting to pay for the service.

While a great webmaster doesn’t need to rely on these tools, they help to get the job done quickly and efficiently. Since they’re all free, you’re only risking your time if you try them out. You may not find them all useful right away, but odds are that their worth will become apparent the more you work on a website. Give them a try and let me know what you think.

Like the article? Share it.

LinkedIn Pinterest

12 Comments

  1. It is wonderful list. Must need tools for webmasters.

  2. Nice post, this is very important to the people who is doing seo. and i know a new backlinks checker to help promotion websites, http://siteexplorer.info is totally free and no limit, and it is very professional.

  3. Thanks for the extra link and the comments guys. Appreciate it and hope it helps.

  4. Very useful and is very great help for such person like me who is doing SEO as a profession.

  5. Hi Daniel, thank you for these 5 SEO tracking tools. I love this five, but I am more confident of using Google Analytics. For me, it this gives the most accurate data.

  6. Yeah I A Gree With Your Articles, But Its Not HelpFull, can you creat tools for Youtube rank chacker?

  7. There is a big market for items on the internet. Go to any well known selling sites to market them. Follow the step-by-step instructions to list an item. Generally, you will need to post a digital picture on the site with a description and contact information. Then you are ready to go into business. Follow the tips provided to get a good start!

  8. I would add Google Webmaster Tools as an essential tool now.

  9. Useful list of tools. I want to suggest one more in this list 99webtools.com

  10. Good list. The only thing I disagree on is Moz Open Site Exporer. Well, it is definitely useful but I’ve been finding that it seems to be lacking a bit recently. The Moz ‘bot crawlers’ just do not go as deep as some other tools I’ve found, and so their results can often be unreliable.

Leave a Comment Yourself

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *