Willet Social , a simple and free service for analyzing social media campaigns
*, began work yesterday.
Willet Social keeps track of all the tweets from your site and issues a sign with a list of the most influential users. The columns indicate the number of transitions to the site for each tweet, as well as the
Klout Score (user authority rating). Klout Score is a rather subjective rating, but the number of clicks to the site is an objective indicator.

')
* The site owners had the misfortune to register in the Lithuanian domain and do not recommend it to anyone else.For the system to work, you need to put a Willet tweet button on the site, which may look like a standard button

. The trick is that when you click on a button for each user, a unique short URL is generated, which is published on Twitter. Thus, Willet can accurately calculate on whose call more users came to the site, given all the retweets. That is, it is an objective indicator, who is the most influential.
Pretty useful service. It is strange that such unpretentious, but very important statistics at the moment cannot be obtained in any of the existing free services for analytics in social media (the developers themselves say, this can be done if you properly configure HubSpot or PostRank, as well as using paid ViralHeat and SocMetrics). But in any case, none of the above can be compared in simplicity with Willet Social.
Among the functionality of Willet Social is exporting the list of the most influential users in JSON and customizing the appearance of the tweet buttons. In the future, they promise to add a weekly mailing list with updates to the rating.
In general, the question arises - if you want to personally know the most influential visitors to your site, who bring you an audience and money on a saucer, what will you do with these useful citizens? By itself, using the Willet Social service will not increase the number of visitors on the site; you just get information about who exactly brought these people.