How We Empowered Our SDR Team to Score Appointments and Get Sales-Ready Leads using #SocialData and the right follow-up sequence: https://okt.to/VN2cv6?utm_content=social-q02fu&utm_medium=social&utm_source=SocialMedia&utm_campaign=SocialPilot
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How We Empowered Our SDR Team to Score Appointments and Get Sales-Ready Leads using #SocialData and the right follow-up sequence: https://okt.to/VN2cv6?utm_content=social-q02fu&utm_medium=social&utm_source=SocialMedia&utm_campaign=SocialPilot
Topics Trending in Tandem: A Social Timeline of Ferguson Topics
Came across this post I wrote on the Carrot blog based on my social analysis after Ferguson. In some ways, it’s outdated, but also still relevant. Originally posted here: https://carrot.is/blogging/industry/ferguson_analytics -----
Social media is now the fastest way to share information on a local and global level. From a quick access source for the latest news, to a public forum for large scale discussions around human rights and the role of government, social media provides a space for both. It is the medium that transmits data in multiple forms—text, photo, video—with content ranging from cute cat pics to more serious, philosophical subjects. Topics, when tracked in social media, show distinctly different trends depending on the nature of the discussion taking place.
The chart below depicts topics mentioned across social media to show trends in the online discussion surrounding the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Using Netbase, a social listening tool, we collected mentions of Ferguson and relevant topics, isolating the mentions for each topic to see how they trended.
Timeline
Saturday, 8/9/14 Ferguson police shoot and kill Michael Brown.
Sunday, 8/10/14 Ferguson top topics in social are: police, Michael Brown and murder (132k total mentions).
Monday, 8/11/14 Looting mentions trend (46k). Reports of rubber bullets used to disperse crowd, but not yet trending in social (22 mentions).
Tuesday, 8/12/14 Tear gas starts trending (60k), as well as rubber bullets (16k).
Wednesday, 8/13/14 Police arrest two reporters covering the protests. Ferguson mentions dip 23% from the day prior.
Thursday, 8/14/14 The day President Obama comments on Ferguson, police, murder, tear gas and protests, topics trend together, while civil rights (144k), militarization (102k) and rubber bullets (57k) mentions peak. Michael Brown mentions also peaked on 8/14 (483k) and then again on 8/18 (333k) trending in tandem with mentions of police, protests and civil rights, suggesting the use of Michael Brown's death to facilitate social change.
Friday, 8/15/14 Police release name of the officer and surveillance tape. Darren Wilson mentions peak (62k). Highway Patrol mentions trend (50k) while protest mentions decline (by 56% from the prior day) with most mentions acknowledging Highway Patrol’s success at keeping the peace.
Saturday, 8/16/14 Looting mentions peak again (63k, +505% from the day prior).
Sunday, 8/17/14 Mentions of civil rights start trending again (+55% from the day prior).
Monday, 8/18/14 MO Governor brings in the National Guard (106k mentions).
Tuesday, 8/19/14 Protests becomes the third most mentioned topic for the first time (194k mentions).
Wednesday, 8/20/14 Ferguson mentions decline 42% from the day prior.
Thursday, 8/21/14 Ferguson mentions continue to decline another 36%.
Friday, 8/22/14 Although Michael Brown mentions trend up slightly (+14%), overall Ferguson mentions continue to decline (-34%). On 8/22, Huffington Post releases an article entitled "21 Numbers That Will Help You Understand WHy Ferguson Is About More Than Michael Brown," that got roughly 11k FB likes, 25k FB shares and nearly 600 tweets to date.
Saturday, 8/23/14 Ferguson mentions continue declining (by 35% from the day prior).
Sunday, 8/24/14 Highway Patrol and Rick Perry mentions start trending (increasing 26% and 67% respectively from the day prior), although overall Ferguson mentions continue to decline (-23% from the day prior).
Another Look
This chart shows the same topics as a percentage of Ferguson mentions to show how much each topic was included in the daily conversation. Looking at this chart, we can see that initially, the story of what happened in Ferguson was relatively simple. On Saturday 8/9 and Sunday 8/10, the conversation focused primarily on the police murdering Michael Brown.
On Monday 8/11 and Saturday 8/16, we start to see the emergence of looting in the overall conversation, as well as other topics that flow out of the initial event. Tear gas becomes one of the top topics mentioned from Tuesday 8/12, and in the following week. We see civil rights mentions gaining traction in the conversation building from 1% on 8/10 to 4% on 8/14, and back down to 1-3% in the days to follow. Similarly, militarization discussion emerges after 8/11 and remains steady in the conversation, included in 1-3% Ferguson mentions.
So What?
There are topics that trend in social that are a direct response to the occurrence of an event, such as looting (8/11, 8/16), the involvement of the Highway Patrol (8/15) and National Guard (8/18), and the release of Officer Darren Wilson’s name (8/15). These events caused an appearance of a new topic in social media as people responded to new news. In the chart above, we see these topics emerge suddenly as a mass of color that did not exist prior; they tend to fizzle out as the news becomes older.
However, there are also topics that emerge as part of the deeper conversation around the news events. These topics include civil rights and militarization, both emerging around 8/11 and 8/12 and steadily making up 1% to 4% of mentions in the days to follow. These topics behave differently in social media in that they are a consistent, ongoing theme of the discussions. They actually look different in the chart above; they are the continuous threads of color, unlike the news event reactions which bubble up and quickly dissipate.
These thread-like topics that remain consistent throughout the evolving discussion reflect more than just the public’s reaction to the news event. These topics involve a deeper look at the state of our government. They are political and impassioned. They go beyond the initial news event and venture into larger conversations about right, wrong and the grey area between them. They have a deeper significance, and they live among the quick and impulsive reactions in the social web.
While some brush off social chatter as flippant and shallow (i.e. slacktivism criticisms), others are having deep, meaningful discussions that have great potential to influence others and drive change.
References: “A new Pew Research Center analysis of media coverage of the event and subsequent protests finds that the story emerged on Twitter before cable, but the trajectory of attention quickly rose in tandem, peaking on both mediums the day after two journalists were arrested and protests turned more violent.”
Top Mentions By Klout
8/10 @FoxNewsRadio (Klout: 87, 113K followers) “Tensions high in Ferguson, MO, a suburb of St. Louis over the fatal shooting by police of an unarmed black teenager.”
8/12 @AP (Klout: 99, 3.76M followers) “Father of teen fatally shot by police asks crowd in Ferguson, "Come together and do this right... No violence": http://t.co/kMNkx7XXIL.”
8/15 @WashingtonPost (Klout: 99, 3.16M followers) “This is what Ferguson police say occurred in the minutes leading up to Michael Brown's death http://t.co/TV7zCf5TtT.”
8/17 @HuffingtonPost (Klout: 99, 4.5M followers) “RT @BuzzFeedNews: Capt. Ron Johnson: "I am you. I will protect you, I will protect your right to protest." #Ferguson http://t.co/3UNk7arw5h.”
8/18 @TIME (Klout: 99, 6.11M followers) “Obama voices concerns on police militarization in wake of Ferguson http://t.co/pa1oFpd2yZ.”
8/19 @TIME (Klout: 99, 6.11M followers) “Paul Ryan: Don't rush to judgment on Ferguson http://t.co/ETT2Sj3S8f.”
8/22 @HuffingtonPost (Klout: 99, 4.5M followers) “21 numbers that help you understand why #Ferguson is about more than Michael Brown http://t.co/g5lhhpDUrU.”
Not to stereotype, but we want to share some fun facts with you about some Nigerian cities and their dating climate. In Portharcourt, many adult ladies from 25 to 30 might have to relocate because adult Portharcourt men go for only girls 15 to 23 years. And by men, mean 30 to 50 years and above because in Portharcourt 25 to 30 years are still boys. Portharcourt and Warri has the most population of teenagers (13 to 18) exposed to early sex by consent. Lagos is in abundance of everything. Everyday, about 7 million rounds of sex happens in Lagos, however, lagos still has the highest number of virgins, young and adult. Lagos has the highest number of sex starved people. Lagos also has the most number of people in the friendzone. Adult guys 25 to 30 years, friendzone the girls 18 to 23 years and go for adult ladies 23 to 28 years. Meanwhile, adult ladies 25 to 30 years, friendzone everyone around their age and go after real adult men 35 to 45 years, but then, the older men prefer the really young girls 17 to 23 years. The city of Abuja is testosterone infested. Men run the city. Cheating is almost normal. Men cheating on their wives with the Portharcourt ladies that ran away. Because in Abuja, young girls don't stand a chance. Escort services are booming in Abuja because there are too many x models. Abuja has a huge number of bored ladies. They love to fly to Lagos the way Portharcourt ladies love to fly to Abuja. Abuja has the highest number of homosexual relationships. Every girl seem to also have a girlfriend. _________ #Discussing #SocialData #NigerianDating @SocialFaculty 😝 😁 (at Lagos, Nigeria)
Colorful, off-menu drinks at Starbucks have taken over Instagram. About a month ago, pictures of a beverage called a "pink drink" that's made with acai tea and coconut milk started popping up on the app, followed by purple, blue, green and orange varieties.
Take a look at the social data behind the latest Instagram obsession—fueled by Starbucks' secret menu—in our story with Adweek.
Crimson Hexagon, a leading provider of social data analysis to inform strategic enterprise decision making, today announced it has raised $20 million in growth equity financing in a round led by Sageview Capital.
Big news from our team this morning, and an even bigger thank you to all who’ve helped us get here. We have a lot of exciting news in store for 2016, so stay tuned.
In a customer-centric world, social insights are the key to creating effective media partnerships, blog posts, commercials and more, says columnist John Donnelly III.
Via twitter by @KJacoby26: @hansonmusic glad you made it to @bbi #music #socialdata #bigboulder http://t.co/GpNypcShfu #Hanson #TaylorHanson
Social Anomaly Detection
Social engagement metrics go up and down daily, and it can be hard to know when there is a significant spike or dip in any given engagement metric that falls outside of the expected range. Anomaly Detection in Adobe Analytics now ingests Adobe Social data and statistical anomalies can be detected for Social Platform growth metrics, Owned Social Post engagement metrics, and Organic Conversations.