There are a lot of companies that will happily relieve you of your  dollars, in exchange for buzz monitoring services. While many large companies  will enjoy the peace of mind that comes from having a company track their  reputation for them, the rest of us need something a little less expensiveor  better yet, free!
 We've compiled a list of twenty six buzz monitoring tools that are free of  charge. Use these tools to keep track of your company reputation or even spy on  your competition!
  
 1. Your Industry

 If you simply don't have time to track everything that specifically relates  to your companyor your competitionyou can still track news that relates to  your industry. Moreover and  Yahoo are just a couple of resources  that offer RSS feeds for aggregated industry news.
 2. Mainstream Media News
 
  
 
One of the best ways to track mainstream media mentions  of your company is to use Google News.  Enter your company name, sort the results by date published and then subscribe  to the RSS feed. You'll get instant RSS updates of any news items that mention  your business. Example for "apple".
 3. News Buzz
 
  
 
It's one thing to track any news that relates to your business,  but what if you just want to know about the news that becomes popular? Sites  such as Digg and Reddit will let you search for submitted stories  that match your company name. Subscribe to the resulting RSS feed and you'll  know about any story on Digg that mentions your companyor your  biggest rival.
 4. Social Media News
   
 
By the time a hot news story gets picked-up by the  mainstream media, it could have made the rounds for days in the blogosphere. You  can capitalize on positive buzz and put out any reputation fires by tracking  social media. Technorati is one of the  best options for tracking social media sites. Custom RSS feeds let you get quick  updates on any blog that  utters your company name.
 5. Blog Posts
 
  
 
If a blog happens to "ping" the blogosphere, the chances  are that it will get on Google Blog  Search. Even if the blog isn't in Google news, or doesn't make the main  Google index, Google Blog Search might still find that story that mentions  your CEO or your recent product launch. Get alerts to matching stories via  email or RSS.
 6. Blog Comments
 
 
 Sometimes tracking a blog post doesn't reveal the full conversation about  your business. The blog post might be positive, but those leaving comments could  attack your reputation. Services such as co.mments.com track the comments left on blogs.  You can search for your brand and subscribe to the RSS feed for instant  updates.
 7. Blog Conversations
  
 
 A negative blog post appears on a low-trafficked blog and there are no  comments to track. End of story? Not quite, what if a very popular blogger picks  up on the story? It could spread very quickly and catch you by surprise. Blogpulse's conversation  tracker will help you track who's linking to that blog post about your  company.
 8. Blog Trends
 
 
 How well is your competitor's new product launch going? Blogpulse trends lets you track  whether a keyword is getting growing blog mentions or not. Apple's iPhone  saw a 1000% jump in blog mentions leading up to its launch.
 9. Bookmarks
  
 
Remember the days when your customers would bookmark  your site in IE and you never knew about it? Thanks to online bookmarking  services such as del.icio.us more people are  sharing their bookmarks online. RSS feeds make it easy to track whenever someone  bookmarks a web page that includes  mention of your company.
 10. Photos
 
  
 
Did an employee release a top-secret photo of your new  products? Did someone snap a photo of your CEO leaving a strip-club? The chances  are high that they might upload it to image hosting sites such as Flickr. Luckily, you can subscribe to an RSS  feed that will update you on any new image that matches  your company name?or the name of your slimy CEO.
 11. Videos
  
 
 So what if your CEO was caught on video having a lap-dance? Ouch! Ok, less  damaging, someone releases a video showing a negative product review. Google Video recently switched focus to  index videos from many online hosting sites (such as YouTube and MetaCafe). Now you can keep track of videos  that include your  company.
 12. Tags
 
 
 Wouldn't it be great if you could enter a keyword and see who used that word  as a "tag" How much better would it be if you could see matching tags across  more than a dozen sites? Keotag.com does  just that, making it easy for you to track if someone tags a page using your  company or product name.
 13. Forum Posts
  
 
Sometimes the most important conversations don't happen on blogs.  Forums and message boards can host conversations about your company and you'd  never know about it. Don't panic! Sites such as Boardtracker.com will keep an eye on  popular forums for you and alert you by RSS if your company  is mentioned in a thread.
 14. Changing Information
  
 
Wikipedia is one of  the most trusted resources for information on the web. You might be interested  in any updates to your company profile or maybe you want to know if your  competitor is trying to remove links to your web site. Fortunately you can track  change history for any Wikipedia page and have the changes sent to your RSS  reader of choice.
 15. Job Listings
 
  
 
If your competitor wants to start a new service or  launch a new product, the chances are they'll need to hire new staff to achieve  this. Classifieds search engine Oodle scours many online job listings and  aggregates the information in a central location. Set up RSS feeds for searches  on your biggest competitors and you'll know whenever they list a vacant  position.
 16. Financial Filings
   
 
You can get a good feel for the financial health of your  publicly-traded competitors by keeping a close eye on their SEC filings. Use Edgar Online and you'll know if  they're subject to an SEC investigation or if their CEO is dumping  stock faster than Martha Stewart.
 17. Conference Calls
  
 
Sticking with public companies, sometimes you can learn  some competitive information by listening to the company's conference calls. But  who has time for that? SeekingAlpha lets you  subscribe to the RSS feed of conference call transcripts. Open up the transcript  and you can quickly get a snapshot  of their financial health. You might even learn about a new product  launchone which you might want to think about for your business.
 18. Patents
  
 
Keeping track of patent filings was notoriously  difficult before Google Patent  Search came along. Now you can keep any eye on patents filed that relate to  your industry. Better yet, keep track of patents that might violate your company  held patents.
 19. Events
 
 
 Yahoo's Upcoming lets you get RSS  alerts on any new event that matches your selected keyword. You can keep track  of conferences that you might want to attend, or sponsor. In addition, you could  keep track of seminars or meeting being held by your competitors.
 20. New Products
 
  
 
Let's say you want to get some ideas of products that  might be hot right now. Amazon.com lets you view product "tags" and then review similar tags. You  can use this to get an idea of companion  products that you might want to launch.
 21. Search Query Trends
 
  
 
What search queries are popular at Google right now?  Thanks to Google Trends you can get an idea of which keywords are most searched  for. You can narrow your research to specific countries or citiesletting you  know if a product has global or local  appeal.
 22. Keyword Referrals
 
  
 
Sure you could probably take an educated guess as to  which sites might get the most traffic for a particular keyword, but it's more  fun to actually spy on your competitors. Compete's Search Analytics allows  you to enter a keyword and see which web sites are getting traffic for that  keyword.
 23. Site Referrals
 
Ok, so maybe you're not sure which keywords you should  target for your next SEM campaign. Compete's Search Analytics will  also let you enter any domain name and see which keywords are driving traffic to  that site. Now you know which keywords your competitors are targeting.
 24. Email Updates
  
 
If you're not quite ready for all of that RSS reader  nonsense, you can still keep track of the latest buzz via email. Google Alerts let you track web, blogs,  news and groups for any phrase you want. Select daily, weekly or "as it happens"  updates and you'll get an email whenever your company name is mentioned.
 25. The Untrackable
  
 
Some stuff just can't be tracked that easily. If you  want to track changes at a siteeven if they don't offer RSS or email  updatesthere are many tools that will do it for you. Our favorite is Copernic's  Tracker which, for $50, will let you keep an eye on any web site. Use it to  monitor RipOffReport.com, forum threads, or even your competitor's web site.
 26. Anything You Want
  
 
 You don't have to be a developer in order to create your own custom buzz  monitoring tool. Thanks to Yahoo  Pipes, you can quickly set up your own RSS tracking, complete with filters.  Want to track Twitter for mentions of your company? Not a problem with Yahoo  Pipes.
 Over to You
 So, that should be enough buzz monitoring tools to get you going. Some are  more useful than others, but all are FREE! What are your favorite buzz  monitoring tools? Leave a comment or post to your own blog and ping us. 
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