I’m a huge proponent of professional listening as part of a business communication strategy. Lots of people will sell you ways to speak. They’ll give you lots of ways to get your message all over the place. Me? I’m passionate about listening as much as I am speaking. You know: two ears, one mouth, that stuff.
I love many of the professional products out there like Radian6, Techrigy, BuzzGain (just launched today!), and Crimson Hexagon to name just a few. But you know, there are ways to listen simply, and though they’re not perfect, they’re free.
I always recommend both. Use a professional platform to get the depth, the reporting, the other added value. But I recommend setting up a free listening station, too. Here’s a quick step by step to start that kind of station off. You might have more ideas for the comments section.
Grow Bigger Ears in 10 Minutes
- Get a gmail account. – http://www.gmail.com
- Log in to Google Reader. This will become your home base for listening. Note the position of the “Add Subscriptions” button (mid top left) – http://www.google.com/reader
- Now, go to Google Blogsearch. Type in your query about your company, your organization, your competitors, and the like. We’ll use the results in the next step. – http://blogsearch.google.com.
- Note the “Subscribe” links on the bottom left of the page. Right-click the RSS link, and select copy.
- Go back to Google Reader, click Add Subscription, and select paste.
- Repeat this for as many variations of searches you want for blogs.
- UPDATE: I hear this feature is going away. You can do the same thing at IceRocket, if so, just do this step at Icerocket instead of Technorati. Go to Technorati. Perform the same queries there. Neither Google nor Technorati finds it all, so cross-posting works. – http://www.technorati.com
- Go to Twitter Search. Do the same. – http://search.twitter.com
- Fine tune your searches by seeing what inaccurate results come from your first attempts, and replace bad searches with better ones.
- Take the payload of all that raw searching and SORT it using Google Reader. By this, I mean the following: when you find something to note, either Share it (Shift S), or email it to a core team ( type E on the keyboard). Send only the important stuff. Then, let internal employees see the RSS feed of the shared items, or just use the email feature. Whichever works best. This is how you sort the larger pile of info into the smaller and more useful packets that your organization can consume.
- Most important to the process – DO something with what you’re learning. Figure out the business value of the listening you’re doing, and route it to the right places. Listening isn’t for marketers. It’s for the organization. It’s for customer service, for product management, for the senior team, etc.
In a nutshell, that’s the plan. You can do this. It’s not especially tricky (though the tuning can be challenging). My question to you: why wouldn’t you?
If this post worked for you, please consider subscribing for free.

Photo credit tanakawho




Pingback: The Reason No One is Listening: 4 Tips to Get More Business
Pingback: Social Media Marketing HQ | Learn Social Media From the Industry's Brightest Minds » Managing Social Presence
Pingback: Managing Social Presence
Pingback: Becoming a Trust Agent w/ @ChrisBrogan [@InboundNow #6] | Internet Marketing Denver | ReachLocal Denver | Social Media Denver
Pingback: Becoming a Trust Agent w/ @ChrisBrogan [@InboundNow #6]
Pingback: Are You an Alligator? | SCOTT PARENT
Pingback: 7 social media measurement tools to build brands by listening
Pingback: The Alchemy of Intimate Engagement : Filters for Personal & Global Evolution | Fierce Wisdom : Self Realization
Pingback: Twitter Tip #120: Make It Easy To Share
Pingback: Social Media Workflows Part 1: Awareness and Capture
Pingback: Social Media Marketing HQ | Learn Social Media From the Industry's Brightest Minds » Social Media Workflows Part 1: Awareness and Capture
Pingback: How to Build Communities Regardless of Social Network | Content Connect
Pingback: » Social Media Workflows Part 1: Awareness and Capture WorkForMoms.net
Pingback: Social Media Workflows Part 1: Awareness and Capture | start follow it
Pingback: EP:018 – The Cotton Club Podcast w/ Keith Crawford, and Amy Bradley Hole : The Cotton Club Podcast & Blog
Pingback: Social Media for Nonprofits: The good, the bad and the ugly | Low Hanging Fruit Communications
Pingback: Rob's Ruminations » Small Business Info & Some Personal Ruminations! » Google Tools for Business, Blog Series – Part 4
Pingback: Social Media: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly « LOI Miami
Pingback: Never Be Left Out
Pingback: Bryan Elliott–The Reason No One Is Listening
Pingback: Are you listening? « Kameel Vohra
Pingback: Inclusion is the secret sauce of social media. It’s one of the biggest opportuni « Open Business Innovation
Pingback: Clean out your ears: 4 social media tips for active listening | MattKinshella.com
Pingback: Are You Listening? « ad int…
Pingback: How to Write and Sell a Successful Ebook
Pingback: Small Business 101, at the New England Expo 2011 - Technical and Professional Communication
Pingback: The Case of TMI: Are you scaring away your customers? | Navigating the Social Web
Pingback: 11 Steps to Developing a Digital Crisis Communications Plan | Justin Levy
Pingback: Movie Lessons: Ocean's Eleven on the importance of listening | David Horne
Pingback: Social Media Monitoring or Listening
Pingback: The Right Tools for the Right Jobs
Pingback: Socially Yours, Kawasaki & Brogan | Energizer Bunnies' Mommy Reports
Pingback: Alexander Howard: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance | PCE Groups, LLC
Pingback: Alexander Howard: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance | On-Call Pros, LLC
Pingback: Alexander Howard: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance
Pingback: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance | Time News
Pingback: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance | Social Networking Expert|Social Media Expert | Social Marketing Expert | Sales Expert Marco Giunta
Pingback: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance | AppsPlanner.com Blog
Pingback: Alexander Howard: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance | Teknoyes.com
Pingback: Online Influence Is Essential to 21st Century Governance – Social Media Education and Service
Pingback: Best and Worst Practices – Social Media Marketing | theperfectspin
Pingback: Online Marketing 101 « BPS Books author care pack
Pingback: Social Media Marketing – Is it Working? Is it Worth It? | many hats media