Inside the Toolkit: Finding Contact Details

find contact detailsI was chatting to a couple of other SEO friends recently and, while discussing link building and link removal, the subject of finding contact details for websites came up. It seems like it’s something that’s becoming more difficult thanks to spammers hammering every contact form they find, so today, I thought I’d talk through a few of the tools I use to find them.

A Note About Discretion

Before I start, it’s worth mentioning that some people who run sites don’t want to hear from you. This is something I’ve noticed has gotten a lot more prevalent since every agency in the known universe started selling “blogger outreach” as a service. If someone’s gone to lengths to hide their contact details, do them a favour and leave them alone, or at least find another way to get in touch.

Now that’s out of the way, on with the show:

Buzzstream

buzzstreamI know I talk about Buzzstream (aff) a lot, but it really is one of the greatest link building tools ever. From finding link prospects to tracking and monitoring your outreach to finding contact details, it really is indispensable and if you’re not using it, you really should be.

This is the main tool in my link building arsenal since it makes the whole process a lot more efficient but still won’t do your job for you. You’ve still got to find out the best way to make your approach and actually do it, but having it all in front of you and tracked makes it an awful lot more efficient and motivating.

Buzzstream will also find contact details on Twitter and other social networks, so if email’s not the right approach, it’s still got everything you need. This incredible feature set combined with its low price makes Buzzstream my first choice for finding contact details and managing your outreach. If that sounds like something you’d be interested in, there’s a free trial here. Give it a go.

The Citation Labs Contact Finder

The Citation Labs Contact Finder is another great tool and, if you’re stuck for budget, offers enough free credits that you can run quite a few sites through it without spending any money and from there it’s pay-as-you-go. This is a seriously handy piece of kit and, with the speed it sends out reports, it’s incredibly useful for quick outreach in those times when you need to be agile.

I found myself using this tool a lot when I had to run a link profile cleanup from a client that came to us from another agency and had the dreaded “unnatural links warning” in their Webmaster Tools profile. Most of these links had been built on terrible paid-for blogs and, as such, there weren’t contact forms on a lot of them. This thing found details for most of them, which really sped the process up.

Tout

tout logoI talked about Tout in my Gmail addons post, so I won’t bore you with the list of features again. Suffice to say that the Chrome and Firefox plugin is a really quick, easy way to find email addresses from a page, just at a glance.

If speed’s your game, Tout is a very handy addition to your toolkit and with its range of other features, it’s well worth a look.

Google

Sometimes, nothing beats a good old-fashioned search. Indeed, I’d argue that if you’re not able to use search engines and their operators to the best of their ability, you’re missing out on possibly the most powerful tool you can get, whichever part of SEO it is you work in.

“site:blah contact”, “site:blah get in touch” etc are a really quick and easy way to find contact links for a site and, best of all, it’s free. It might not work every time, but there are enough operators out there that you should be able to find what you’re looking for pretty quickly.

Screaming Frog

If all else fails, a Screaming Frog crawl will usually work. Set “mailto” or even “@” in the Custom field and see what you get. Again, I only advocate this in the event of running a serious link cleanup. If a blogger or site owner that you’d like to get a link from has gone to lengths to hide their details, respect that, or at least try and find their Twitter account and try getting in touch that way.

Scrapebox

whois logoIt’s come to this: the last resort. You’re absolutely convinced that the links from a couple of sites are what’s causing your unnatural links problem and you don’t want to take the risk of playing with Google’s Disavow Tool. Time to get a little creative.

Scrapebox is an excellent tool that’s got a bit of a bad reputation because certain types of people use it to spam blog comments sections (I think it was a major cause of the problems I discussed here), but there is so much that a white hat SEO can get from it. This is one of those examples.

There’s a whois scraper plugin. Install that, run the operation on the sites you’re convinced are causing your problems and get to work. You might find that these are owned by other agencies and such forth, so you might think of a few devious ways to use this information. It’s not my place to condemn any of them, but I’m not going to talk through any of them here either – we are pushing 1000 words again, after all.

How About You?

contact detailsI haven’t even scratched the surface here, but these are my main tools for finding contact details on sites, whether for positive outreach or cleaning up someone else’s mess.

I know there are a few that I’ve missed – what are your favourites? I hope you enjoyed the first proper post on my new site. Don’t forget to sign up for my mailing list if you want to receive my latest post in your email.