You can find inspiration in the strangest of places.
I happened to find my ray of light whilst re-organising my SEO related bookmarks. Yes, they may have been messy and a clean out might have been overdue, but if I didn’t do it today, the day I happened to be thinking about what to blog about then we would have never arrived here, would we?
Trying to structure my bookmarks made me very aware of what was current and what was out of date. It made me realise what tools I could, and couldn’t live without. What blogs I could and couldn’t stop reading. And most importantly, what people I could and couldn’t stop listening too. The top blogs and people are another post altogether so you will just have settle for the most valuable tools and stay tuned for the rest of the series. So without further ado, here we go, the top ten SEO tools and plug-ins you literally couldn’t live without:
SEO Quake
This powerful tool is compatible with a range of browsers and gives a user a wide range of SEO parameters. It saves you so much time it must be similar to hiring a personal assistant, without the tea making ability. You can utilise it to see a quick overview of number of links to page and domain, number of internal & external links from individual pages, age of domain, keyword density and other important SEO factors of a page. Go see for yourself.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/3036
Open Site Explorer
This is one of the best link analysis tools around (without paying) Essential for any link building campaign , it will show you up to 10,000 links to a page or site based on Page Authority OR Domain Authority. You can even see the anchor text used, compare two domains side by side, and which content is drawing the most links on your competitor’s website. AND if that wasn’t enough they even offer a good sorting and filtering option for reports and can be exported to CSV for further analysis. How considerate of them.
http://www.opensiteexplorer.org
This tool lets you check what type of redirect is in place for any individual page. A programmer’s nightmare as we are now able to see very quickly just how lazy they have been by implementing 302’s instead of 301’s.
http://www.internetofficer.com/seo-tool/redirect-check/
SEO Book Tool Bar
Where would a workman be without his toolkit? This is another great toolbar which contains a lot of valuable and essential tools of the trade. It has many of the same features as SEO Quake but also a few more hidden up its sleeve. You can compare up to 5 different sites which is great for link analysis for competitor research and another great gem is an easy no follow link highlighter.
http://tools.seobook.com/seo-toolbar/
FireBug
I recently read Kelvin Newman’s “Are we ignoring the Golden Age of SEO” post here, and I agree, technical knowledge is important within the field of SEO and can’t be ignored. Firebug goes someway to addressing these concerns by putting a wealth of development tools at your fingertips. You can monitor CSS, view HTML, and JavaScript live in any web page and it can even help you see how long pages take to load and what may be causing the slow loading times. Absolutely essential for web developers and very handy for knowledge hungry SEO’s.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1843/
Spider Test
Ever wondered what a spider sees when it crawls your page? Is it giving you endless sleepless nights? Then worry no more with our star prize this week. This spider simulator tool displays shows the source code of a page, and identifies all outbound links on the page, provides cached copies of the page, the number of indexed pages in major search engines, and common words and phrases found in the page copy.
http://tools.seobook.com/general/spider-test/
XML Sitemap Generator
Creating XML sitemaps is a key part of technical SEO. It helps you monitor broken links and is particularly useful if your site has dynamic content or has a large archive of content pages that are not well linked to.
This tool lets you enter your full website URL and some optional parameters and then provides a detailed sitemap page, including the number of pages, broken links list, XML file content and a link to a compressed sitemap. It is FREE up to a maximum of 500 pages and you can manually or automatically adjust the priority of pages.
Whois
Great for domain ‘who dunnit’ mysteries and snooping around online. You can check important server and hosting details via this tool.
Google Webmaster Tools:
I had to have one Google based tool in here. Webmaster tools let’s you see an overview of your site, including broken links, http error pages, Geo Targeting and the option of resubmitting of sitemaps. Two of the more recent additions is the search query feature, which lets you see the number of impressions for search queries, the CTR you are achieving for it and an average ranking position. Another addition is the subscriber stats for your site. Go have a look and boost you ego.
http://www.google.com/webmasters/tools
SEOmoz GeoTarget
As explained from the horse’s mouth “this tool determines how well a site is targeted to region-specific search engines”. This tool is great for small local businesses as it helps you understand where search engines think you website is located, and how this may be affecting targeting a specific audience. It also highlights your local online presence by providing a list of local search results for the 3 major search engines for your brand name and website.
http://www.seomoz.org/geotarget
Excellent stuff Sam. I use a slightly different set of tools myself, such as SearchStatus, SEO for Firefox, and Live HTTP Headers. And SEO Quake, OSE, GWT, and Firebug are also fixed tools in my arsenal.
Nice list Sam! I’d agree with Barry that Http Live Headers is a good go-to to have sitting in your FF. I’d also add the Web Developer Toolbar and User Agent Switcher Firefox addonare super useful for quickly seeing a page the way you want – switching js off, seeing the page as it’d show in dreaded IE6 etc.
Any thoughts on Chrome extensions? I’ve got a few but they’re so far generally not half as good as FF plugins. Still stuck on my super slow FF at the mo until Chrome extensions expand a little!
Thanks for the additional tools Barry and Annabel.
Funny you mention the Web Developer tool – I actually had the Chris Pederick tool in there but took it out as many people have experienced minor issues with it. I also have the HTTP headers tool which I agree is great!
I am a FF whore I am afraid :0) I believe a few of the tools are compatible with Chrome but in terms of general plugins and extensions they are just not competing as of yet….
[...] Top 10 FREE SEO Tools & Plug-ins You (Literally) Couldn't Live … [...]
Yeah I still am a FF whore – but it’s necessity rather than love. I’m ever losing patience with the damn thing crashing all the time or running slower than a lame snail. Chrome is awesome for general browsing, really hope they get some decent extensions for it soon!
[...] Top 10 FREE SEO Tools & Plug-ins You (Literally) Couldn't Live … [...]
I use seo-browser.com for the spider check. Also tools.pingdom.com, and firebug + yslow, and the google page speed plugin are great. Another cute tool is search cloudlet, which works on the SERPs and in twitter.
Let’s not forget about the classic Xenu link sleuth which has been invaluable more than once.
Also, because I have the tendency to behave like a pedantic schoolteacher: You use the word literally like Alanis uses the word ironic.
No Google Keyword Tool? or another keyword research tool?
The Google Tool is the only way for me to do research relevant keywords for an audience outside of the US.
Just wanted to mention that you should look up the word literally. Unless, of course, people are actually dying…
Hello @Ann – thank you for taking the time to read my post and comment. The only reason a keyword research tool was not in the list was because of the many FREE and PAID varieties, and for me to discuss both and their benefits would need a whole new post!
@Brian – Thank you for your insightful comment. I literally did look it up and it literally said:
1. In a literal manner; word for word: translated the Greek passage literally.
2. In a literal or strict sense: Don’t take my remarks literally.
Thanks everyone.
@Sam I see you found the topic for your next post then
Those are very good tools which i like to use myself, good share!
Hi Sam,
First time writer, long time reader.
I love SEO book I use it all the time to gauge improvements to websites
Ps can I have your number?
Hello everyone, thanks for all the comments.
Welcome Bryan, happy you have stepped out of the shadows :0)
The internet is probably not the best place to post a phone number but my email is sam[@]vervesearch.com
Thanks
I’ve been using firebug and seo quake. These really works for me.
[...] to leave a comment about the phrase”live without”, it’s a figure of speech, don’t be a numbskull..Have a great weekend [...]
[...] to leave a comment about the phrase”live without”, it’s a figure of speech, don’t be a numbskull..Have a great weekend [...]
Nice list mate, its a shame XML sitemaps only generates sitemap for upto 500 pages for Free addition.
I also quite like SEO Browser and Web Sniffer for Spider test. On these you can select how Bot will look at your page on different browsers including Iphone’s Safari browser
.
Also agree with Annabel about Web Developer Toolbar and User Agent Switcher Firefox addons.
[...] by the post Top-10 FREE SEO Tools where Sam Murray mainly talks about the most useful tools out there and since I had to re-install [...]
Check the screaming frog seo tool. its like Microsofts SEO site analysis crawler but with a better GUI and it does first link checking on a per page basis which is outstanding… takes my onsite analysis time from a few weeks to a couple of days!
spend in finding keywords. These tools also analyze your competitor’s website keywords. And finally they output easy to understand report for this whole process for you.