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MAKING SENSE OF TWITTER: A MONITORING & ANALYSIS CASE STUDY

[En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

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Page 1: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

MAKING SENSE OF TWITTER:A MONITORING & ANALYSISCASE STUDY

Page 2: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

SOCIAL MEDIA: THE NEW VOICE OF THE MARKET?

Page 3: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

BRANDS ARE AT THE HEARTOF SOCIAL MEDIA CONVERSATIONS

88% of French web users expect brands to enter to enter the conversations (CSA – March 2009)

59% of French web users frequently visit branded communities and hubs (Performics – June 2010)

40% of French Facebook users like at least one brand (OpinionWay – Octobre 2010)

Page 4: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

THE 4 GOLDEN RULES OF CONVERSATION

1. LISTENING ≠ HEARING

2. UNDERSTANDING ≠ MEASURING

3. ENGAGING ≠ ADVERTISING

4. LONG TERM ≠ INSTANT

Page 5: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

TWITTER: A PRECURSOR OF FUTURE WEB USAGE?Creating and transmitting information: journalists and blogers, PR professionals, brands

Sending automated tweets (RSS feeds, twittbots): media, web news sites, e-commerce

Sharing private life, personal feeling, web discoveries, buzz : personal users and people

Monitoring and sharing professional information: digital marketing, SM and MarCom professionals

Page 6: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

TWITTER IN A SMM PROJECT

Monitoring and analysing Twitter is useful for three main reasons:

For itself to analyse the content of the messages and images shared

To detect links to interesting information

As an alert system on hot topics and emerging issues

Furthermore, thanks to its open API, monitoring set up is very easy

Page 7: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

CASE STUDY

Page 8: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

INTRODUCTION A FMCG market

Brands with IRL points of sales

A global ongoing SM Monitoring & Analysis project

9 competitors monitored

20,000 different sources monitored and more than 100,000 documents collected, qualified and analysed per year

Twitter’s weight among all documents collected: 82%

Page 9: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

METHODOLOGY (1/3)

Collection of 45,438 tweetsfrom the 01/01 to 15/09

24,042 factual tweetsAnalysis

Tweets with url Tweets without url

Analytical sample 1,000 tweets

Analysis base21,396 meaningful tweets

Analytical sample 1,000 tweets

Page 10: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

METHODOLOGY (2/3)1,000 tweets with url

Qualification

Main expression theme: brand, corporate/communication, products, services & employment

Subject/news having ignited conversation

Page 11: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

METHODOLOGIE (3/3)1,000 tweets without url

Qualification

Intention: initial tweeting reason (expression, question, transmission or comment on an information)

Main expression theme: brand, corporate/communication, products, services & employment

Attitude, behaviour or opinion expressed around main expression theme

12 patterns detected

3 opinions: positive, negative and neutral opinion

3 behaviours:consumption, buzz, chit chat

6 attitudes:expectation, announcement, question, notification, confirmation, recommendation

Page 12: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

ANALYSIS – THE WEIGHT OF FACTUAL TWEETS

53% of all tweets are factual vs. 31% for other types of documents: users only quote brands/products or their visit to a specific point of sales

No analytical value except for Share of Voice assessment

Page 13: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

ANALYSIS – MEANINGFUL TWEETS

47% of all tweets: beyond products/brands and points of sales, an action, a sentiment, an opinion is expressed

85 meaningful tweets on average per day: a 200% increase over 8 months !!!

Page 14: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

ANALYSIS – MEANINGFUL TWEETS

11,818 «twitterers » for 21,396 tweets : 1,8 tweet on average per user

68% only twitted once

4% twitted more often than once a month

Only 10 of them twitted more than 30 times: this top 10 accounts for 5% of all tweets. The top 100 accounts for 17% of all tweets

No 20 80 rule: a few hardcore users followed but lotsof casual twitterers

Page 15: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

ANALYSIS – MEANINGFUL TWEETSTop 20 twiterrers:

12 hardcore «twitterers » tweeting and retweeting on everything (users who twitted on average 30,000 times since they use Twitter)4 buzz and digital marketing specialised blogers: interesting influencers for digital and offline campaigns2 employees of one of the brands1 corporate stakeholder who twitted because of 3 major corporate crisis1 sector blog: specialised in brands and products

Large volumes from generalists and identification of interesting influencers

Page 16: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

Corporate

Products

Services

Employment

Page 17: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study
Page 18: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

ANALYSIS – MEANINGFUL TWEETS WITH URLAmong these 15 news/events, we found:

6 buzz on ads and digital campaigns (11% du volume)2 buzz on corporate crisis (18% du volume)2 buzz on new services (5% du volume)2 buzz on product launches (3% du volume)2 buzz on corporate issues (2% du volume)1 buzz on SM strategy of one of the brands (5% du volume)

Helpful insights and measures for corporate crisis management and campaigns effectiveness assessment

Page 19: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

CRISIS MANAGEMENT

Page 20: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

Spontaneous expression

Information transmission

Comments on information

Information seeking

Page 21: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

6%

7%

9%

9%

14%

16%

18%

21%

Employé

Référence

Prix/promo

Services

Expérience PdV

Marque

Communication

ProduitsProducts

Communication

Branding

POS experience

Services

Price/promotion

Pointless reference

Employee feedback

Page 22: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

Negativecomments

Positivecomments

Balancedcomments

Page 23: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

TRACKING OPINIONS TO CREATE BRANDED CONTENT

Page 24: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

Chit chat

Buzz

Consumption

Page 25: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

FROM BEHAVIOURS AND OPINIONS LISTENING TO ENGAGEMENT

Page 26: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

Expectation

Announcement

Question

Notification

Confirmation

Recommendation

Page 27: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

TRACKING AND MANAGING EXPECTATION

Page 28: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

RECOMMENDATION AS A PROMOTION DRIVER

Page 29: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

AS A CONCLUSION

Page 30: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

TWITTER AS AN INSIGHT SOURCE

Useful and unique vs. other MR tools for understanding immediate experience with TV ads, point of sales, etc.

Has to be taken in a global SMM perspective

Has to be analysed in the long term to gather value information

Despite its short format, needs to be analysed through specific qualification patterns

Has to be processed through text mining AND human approach to detect language subtleties and nuances

Page 31: [En] Making sense of Twitter, a monitoring and analysis case study

TWITTER AS A DIGITAL STRATEGY OPPORTUNITY

A tool for alerting and measuring

A tool for crowdsourcing content creation

A tool for brand promotion

A tool for customer care