Being a chrome junkie and also a keen productivity evangelist I’m predictably a huge fan of javascript bookmarktels. I use them all day long and over time I’ve built up a few that I have made myself that I thought I’d share today.
What is a javascript bookmarklet?
A javascript bookmarklet is a small piece of javascript code that you can execute in your browser by bookmarking a link. I’m shamelessly going to steal Rand’s image from his old post on bookmarklets:
The Basics – Cached Pages & Site Searches
What I’m covering in this blog post are all kinds of weird and wonderful bookmarklets but I want to re-post the basics here for you since these two bookmarklets I literally use 10s of times a day:
- Quickly run a Google site: search for the site you’re on – Site Search
- Jump to the Google cache version of the URL you’re on – Google Cache
Rand actually wrote a post that covers a lot of the standard bookmarklets (including the two above) and if you’re new to them I strongly suggest you check it out: 30 SEO bookmarklets to save you time
Open Site Explorer Bookmarklets
Of course you can use the moz toolbar to quickly grab stats and jump to your favorite tools but sometimes I prefer the speed and elegance of a bookmarklet instead so here’s a bunch of them that work with the new open site explorer URLs:
- Open Site Explorer Links
- Open Site Explorer Top Pages
- Open Site Explorer Anchor Text
(By the way, while I’m mentioning OSE – you do know that CSV downloads are back right? Woop! Good job moz team!)
Domain Insights
These bookmarklets are designed to give you some insights about the domain you’re browsing.
- Domain name search volume:
- Google Adplanner:
- SEMrush
- MajesticSEO:
Social Data
I’ve talked about my love of Topsy on here before and it will be no big surprise that I have a Topsy bookmarklet:
This gives you quick access to an OSE-style view of the most tweeted pages on a domain:
I’ve also talked about sharedcount before and it’s no surprise I have one for them too:
Google Analytics Debugging
I spend an unhealthy amount of time in Google Analytics and often end up needing to debug how a site is using GA and what’s going on with a particular issue. Both of these bookmarklets come in handy for this:
- Check the cookie of the site you’re on:
- Check the referrer for the page you’re on:
Technical SEO Stuff
Here’s a few more technical SEO bookmarklets for some common functions that I find myself using over and over again:
- Check if the page you’re on has a canonical tag and alert you to it:
- Check if the page you’re on has a meta robots tag and alert you to it:
Thanks to Berian Reed I also discovered these awesome bookmarklets:
SERPs Damn It
This is an awesome bookmarklet that you run on a SERPs page and it will open a new tab with all of the rankings displayed in an easy to copy and paste manner which is perfect if you’re looking to quickly gather some data to throw in excel or an email or whatever:
Go check out the bookmarklet and explanatory video here.
HTTP Header Checkers
Webconfs has a nice header checker that has a bookmarklet associated with it. Here’s the bookmarklet and here’s the tool.
If you’d prefer a bookmarklet that stays in the window – check out this bookmarklet from yoast which gives you something like this:
Fun Social Stuff
We’re entering an age of connected data and I stumbled across the Google social graph API a little while back and instantly fell in love. Using this tool you can quickly and easily see what pages Google has crawled and associated with a particular page. This is best demonstrated visually – if I put my twitter URL into the tool Google tells me that I’m related to these pages:
When you’re doing twitter research and trying to find out who someone is or find out how you might be able to get in touch with someone it’s often handy to quickly lookup a twitter handle here and see where else that person lives online so I built a bookmarklet that jumps straight to the google social graph page from a twitter page:
Bonus Stuff
A lot of people I know swear by Quix which is supposed to be like bookmarklets on steroids. Personally I’ve never quite gotten my head around it (despite all the keyboard shortcut goodness) but I feel like I’m likely in the minority – if you’re a power user be sure to check it out!
While creating and testing bookmarklets I found this JS prettifier extremely useful.
Let’s Hear It For The Community!
I’d love to see what the community has built – what bookmarklets have you pimped your browser out with? Leave your best in the comments!