SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 18
Descargar para leer sin conexión
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 1© Brandwatch.com
Product Guide/
Historical Data
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 2
Contents
1.0 Introduction����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������3
1.1 The Value of Historical Data�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������3
1.2 A New Landscape�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������4
2.0 Historical Data In Action������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5
2.1 Five Ws of Research�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5
2.2 Consumer Insight�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5
2.3 Campaign Measurement ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������10
2.4 Competitor Intelligence �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������12
2.5 Product Development���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������14
3.0 The Future for Historical Research Using Social Data����������������������������������������16
3.1 How Brandwatch Can Help ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������16
3.2 Listen, Analyze and Act with Confidence���������������������������������������������������������������������16
About Brandwatch��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������17
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 3
1.0 Introduction
1.1 The Value of Historical Data
Historical context plays a fundamental role in shaping every aspect of the web.
Every tweet, post, article and comment is influenced by the context in which it is written and the wider
issues that frame it. An opinion is always affected by seasonality, global events, the cultural climate and
even the virality of a meme. Without fully understanding the historical context of a post online, social
analysts will struggle to draw reliable meaning from their data.
In the absence of historical context, a number of assumptions must be made. These assumptions
ultimately lead to biases that skew results and impair all insight.
Your company may receive a surge in positive mentions straight after the release of a new advert during
the summer. Using real-time data, you may assume this increase was in direct response to the advert.
Moreover, you may conclude that the advert is successful as it caused your largest spike in mentions.
However, with years worth of historical data, you could uncover a very different conclusion. You may
discover that a surge in mentions always appears during the summer and the advert actually made no
significant impact.
You could look back and see that past adverts generated far more mentions than your recent release,
which in comparison, performed poorly.
YEARLY JOB EMOTION
1:1
2:1
3:1
4:1
5:1
JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DECJUNMAYAPR MARFEBJAN
2015 2016
RATIOLOVE:HATE
MOST
LOVE
LEAST
LOVE
Brandwatch and Monster analyzed over 2 million mentions from US employees, the data shows how attitudes towards jobs
changes over a year.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 4
Although this error feels elementary, it is not uncommon. The majority of brands still don’t use social data
for research and those that do often don’t work with historical data.
In fact, Altimeter research shows that while marketing is represented in 70% of social business strategy
meetings, market research is present just 15% of the time. That should not be the case. Data-driven
insights should be foundational to business decisions1
.
1.2 A New Landscape
In the very early years of social media monitoring, historical analysis was impossible. Success depended
on boosting the number of followers and likes for a single month. Organizations could only compare
themselves to their competitors.
To-date, Brandwatch has collected six years of archived data, which can be quickly searched and
analyzed. In addition, we've upgraded our historical features, letting users gather an unlimited number of
historical insights at unprecedented speed.
The functionality is available, but why should you start using it for all of your analysis?
1
Altimeter. The 2015 State of Social Business: Priorities Shift from Scaling to Integrating. 2015.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 5
2.0 Historical Data In Action
As social listening platforms cultivate growing archives of historical data, the applications of social data
have become varied.
Use-cases which involve discovering consumer insights, measuring previous campaigns, benchmarking
against competitors and fueling product development, can all be enhanced with the input of historical
data. But before you embark on a detailed analysis of past conversations, you should first consider the
research basics.
A starting point for all historical research should be the “five Ws”. This process helps focus your research
and ensures you produce actionable results.
2.1 Five Ws of Research
Why - Why are you carrying out this research? Are you looking for a way to improve your product’s design
or an avenue to invest marketing resources into?
Who - Who are you researching? Does your analysis solely examine customers? If so what demographics
and psychographics are you focusing on? Note that conversation from different segments change over
time. A group of critics who talk about you today, may not have six months ago.
What - What are your goals? If your research is focused on product development, what features are you
focusing on? Create a short brief that details your goals.
When - What time frame do you wish to look at? Are you looking at a large dataset containing years, or a
small sample from a specific month? In practice, a longer time frame is more reliable.
Where - Which channels and locations are you most concerned about? How will you factor in owned
posts on one channel compared to another?
Once you have worked through each of these points, you should find it
easier to focus your work and achieve each goal.
For example, Monster, a client of Brandwatch, used a similar framework
when they conducted research on the American job market.
Monster carried out its research to better understand how Americans
spoke about their jobs online (why). The research looked at social media
users from the U.S.A who posted opinions about their job (who / where).
Monster aimed to find if Americans loved or hated their job and how this
changed based on a user’s demographics and psychographics (what), over
two years (when).
The more tightly defined the questions, the more beneficial the research is likely to be.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 6
2.2 Consumer Insight
Case Study: Predicting Purchases
A full history of consumers’ online mentions will help any brand uncover actionable insights and ultimately
make smarter business decisions.
One of our clients, a large beauty retailer in America, used historical data to look at how it distributed
stock. The company had a niche issue. Its diverse product range contained high-value goods and the
organization couldn’t always be sure it was distributing the right stock to the right stores.
In closed-locations, like American airports, the beauty retailer knew how important it was to fill the store
with goods that would entice the footfall. However, the customer range at different airports was so varied,
the retailer couldn’t pin down which products would work best.
Traditional means of matching sales with new stock did not work. Sales data showed demand varied
greatly and no consistent themes prevailed. The beauty retailer turned to historical social data to find an
answer.
The research team used search terms to collect geo-tagged social conversation from within each airport.
Using Brandwatch classification options, the brand segmented this data and tracked the purchase intent
for beauty products at each location.
#BrandwatchTips: The geo-tagged component in Brandwatch can reveal where
a tweet was published right down to street-level.
Backlogging this data over three years immediately revealed trends for each location. Some locations
showed consistent conversation over time expressing a desire to purchase high-end handbags, while
other airports provoked discussion about designer wristwatches.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 7
•HANDBAGS •WATCHES •PERFUME •CLOTHING
SEATTLE
HOUSTON
CHICAGO JFK
MIAMI
LOS
ANGELES
This smart use of historical data allowed this brand to implement a customer-focused solution, however,
this story doesn’t end there.
After collecting the insight using historical data, the beauty retailer was able to implement reactive
marketing techniques using real-time data. Tracking conversation as it came in, the retailer immediately
identified a spike in conversation about a specific product in a specific airport.
When this spike occurred, the retailer changed the in-store digital display to show adverts for the products
creating the spike. For example, a growth in conversation about designer earrings would trigger an alert in
Brandwatch, which the marketers used to change the storefront display.
#BrandwatchTips: Use Signals to monitor conversations about your brand. If volumes breach a
predetermined threshold, you’ll receive an Alert.
Social data provided a smart flexible response to a long-standing problem. The bespoke stock distribution
based on personalized consumer preferences caused a bump in sales in stores across America.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 8
The Significance of Seasonality
All online conversation is affected by seasonality. To pull reliable consumer insights, you need to
understand how seasonality will affect your data.
Although large seasonal events, like holidays, can produce predictable results at a large scale, determining
the effect of seasonality isn’t always clean-cut. Your brand might buck the trend, or your product might
deviate from expectations.
In the ice cream industry, sales tend to rise in summer and drop in winter. It is a seasonal industry and the
majority of products follow this correlation.
It would be easy to assume that this is the same for all types of ice cream, and that your brand fits within
the trend. But this assumption doesn’t stay true for everyone.
Unilever put this to the test. Their consumer insights team collected every mention from consumers who
expressed a desire to purchase Ben  Jerry’s ice cream, going back multiple years.
Plotting this data on a line graph didn’t show a clear peak in summer and drop in winter. Instead, it showed
a line, with spikes in conversation, gradually increasing each year. Clearly, the seasonality affecting the
industry wasn’t affecting this brand.
But that didn’t mean seasonality didn’t exist.
Unilever took this historical data and compared it to weather data to see if specific weather types
provoked a desire to purchase the brand.
Blending these two data sets revealed a surprising correlation.
Consistently, over previous years, rainy weather encouraged consumers to purchase tubs of Ben  Jerry’s
ice cream. So unlike the wider industry, rain was provoking purchases, rather than the sunshine.
AS THE TEMPERATURE DECREASED, INTENT-TO-PURCHASE MENTIONS ROSE
This data transformed the way the brand advertised its products online. Using smart, responsive online ad
banners, Unilever increased the distribution of adverts when rain was scheduled and optimized its digital
advertising budget.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 9
Three Types of Seasonality
It’s clear that seasonality isn’t as obvious as we might assume. It doesn’t follow strict rules that stay true
for all brands. It’s unpredictable and changes dramatically from one brand to the next.
So, what should you look out for and how can you use historical data to find it?
First, you have to know what to look for. Capitalize are three levels of seasonality: societal, industry-based
and brand-based. Each level contains different factors that affect social data.
1.	 Societal seasonality
This refers to the overarching trends that appear to affect society as a whole. For example, the
conversations about purchasing goods peak during the holidays.
0
10000
20000
30000
JAN 14 JUL 14 JAN 15 JUL 15 JUL 16JAN 16
MENTIONVOLUME
JUL 13
CONVERSATION ABOUT CHRISTMAS GIFTS OVER TIME
2.	 Industry seasonality
This is the conversation that changes based on the industry you’re looking at. For example, conversations
about all types of bathing suits increase during the summer.
MENTIONVOLUME
0
300
600
900
1200
SEP 13 JAN 14 MAY 14 SEP 14 JAN 15 MAY 15 SEP 15 JAN 16 MAY 16 SEP 16
CONVERSATION ABOUT SWIMMING OVER TIME
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 10
3.	 Brand seasonality
Even brands experience seasonality. Here changes occur for companies that don’t affect the industry
they’re part of. For example, Ben  Jerry’s generate intent to purchase conversation about its ice cream
during the winter season as rain becomes more frequent.
Having an awareness of each type of seasonality lets you seek out predictable changes that recur in your
data. Doing so will allow you to factor in fluctuations in data and collect reliable results from your social
listening platform.
#BrandwatchTips: Chart mentions over time to look for seasonality factors like vacations, business
cycles or national holidays.
Collect historical data for your wider industry, direct competitors, individual brand and owned products,
and map it over a number of years. Analyze trends and look for peaks and troughs that affect every
segment, showing societal or industry seasonality. Then search for recurring spikes in mentions for only
your brand or products – these could indicate brand seasonality.
Document each of these and compare them to live data. That way you can see if fluctuations in
conversation today are following clear seasonal trends, or if they are unique. Doing so will help reduce the
margin of error in your analysis.
Social Platform Context
In addition to seasonality changes, brands on social media are also affected by slight changes to the
networks themselves.
While your brand may grow in response to your marketing efforts, the platform you use to broadcast your
message may grow as well.
Researchers should factor this in when assessing the growth of a brand. If conversation about your
industry on Twitter is growing by 2% month on month, all conversation about the brand should grow by
the same amount.
With historical data, you can compare the growth trend of your brand with the platform you're using.
2.3 Campaign Measurement
Case Study: Measuring Valuable Hype
With historical data, campaign measurement becomes more reliable and valuable. You can quickly
compare a campaign to all your previous work to determine its success.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 11
THE RELEASE PROCESS
This is vital for video game publishers, as investments in marketing campaigns grow dramatically. In
2015, the industry spent $630 million on TV advertisements alone. But TV is just one element. Campaigns
now include announcements, teaser content, trailers, public keynotes, demos and more. Understanding
how these affect sales figures is a key task for any major publisher.
ANNOUNCEMENT TEASER CONTENT DEMO DLCRELEASE
However, when analyzing its recent release, a Brandwatch client realized that spikes in mentions didn’t
impact on whether people actually bought the game. The hype didn’t equate to sales, so to speak.
Detailed research intending to find which types of conversations lead to sales was carried out using years
of historical data.
By listening exclusively for language relating to pre-ordering the game, the organization separated generic
conversation from the intent to purchase conversation.
Analysis of the pre-launch conversation surrounding two different games uncovered the answer.
The publisher found that Game 1 generated more mentions than Game 2, but less intent to purchase
mentions. Subsequently, Game 2 generated more sales overall, suggesting that intent to purchase
mentions correlated with actual sales.
TOTAL MENTIONS
TOTAL INTENT TO PURCHASE MENTIONS
TOTAL SALES AFTER ONE WEEK
70,143
GAME 1
1,295
300,000
GAME 2
30,456
4,012
600,000
What became clear, from measuring a number of previous campaigns, was that indiscriminate hype,
measured by total mentions, did not necessarily equate to sales.
Simply monitoring buzz as a campaign goal may not be enough to make confident predictions about a
campaign’s success, nor is it a valid metric to measure the effectiveness of different marketing activities.
#BrandwatchTips: Listen for language that suggests people are keen to buy your products - “I can’t
wait for the new Call of Duty
This smart use of historical data validated the importance of monitoring social conversation during
campaigns. The unsolicited, unbiased, open communication from the web provided a reliable way to
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 12
measure demand.
2.4 Competitor Intelligence
Case Study: Exploring New Markets
In the last 15 years, 52% of the Fortune 500 have disappeared from the list.
Simply put, competition is harsher than ever. Having a clear awareness of your competitor’s actions and
how customers react is paramount.
Almost every brand is interested in learning how competitors have performed and how its performance
rates in comparison. Figures mean nothing in a vacuum, so benchmarking can be crucial to getting a true
understanding of success.
With historical data, you can capitalize on the same insights you’ve found for your brand by applying them
to your direct competition.
For Tesla Motors, access to historical competitive insight became vital when they explored plans to
expand into the Mexican market.
Tesla wanted to better understand the conversation surrounding gasoline-powered cars vs. hybrid cars
vs. electric cars and how it changed over time.
Using historical data Tesla concluded that Mexican conversation about hybrid cars was minimal, while the
conversation about electric cars was on the rise.
1500
1000
2000
500
0
11 JAN 25 JAN 8 FEB 22 FEB 7 MAR 21 MAR 4 APR 18 APR 2 MAY 16 MAY
CONVERSATION ABOUT TYPES OF CARS
•GASOLINE POWERED •ELECTRIC •HYBRID
MENTIONSVOLUME
Competitors in the hybrid and gasoline industry weren’t generating the same buzz as the electric car
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 13
industry. This suggested that Tesla’s products might fit the market. But the automotive manufacturer
didn’t stop there.
With access to historical data, Tesla was able to listen to the unfiltered opinion of thousands of
prospective clients and competitors' clients over the past three years.
Historical data was used to create Categories around key online topics. Broken down, this data revealed
how conversation differed between Tesla and its competitors.
• TECHNOLOGY • PRICE • BATTERY/CHARGER • DESIGN
• ACCELERATION • ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT • ECONOMIC INCENTIVES
25%
15%
40% 36%
27%
13%
11%
8%
10%
7%
3% 0% 3% 1%
TESLA
ELECTRIC
CARS
TOPICS THAT DOMINATED ONLINE CONVERSATION
The data indicated that while audiences who discussed electric cars were mainly interested in the
environmental impact, Tesla’s audience showed a clear interest in technology and price. This information
is key when it comes to positioning the brand in this new market.
It’s only a piece of the puzzle, but for Tesla, historical data was vital in assessing the competitive
landscape.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 14
2.5 Product Development
Case Study: Profitable Product Feedback
For many brands, fast product development is required to meet consumer needs and keep up with
agile competitors.
However, identifying exactly what consumers want can be a slow and painstaking process.
Let’s say you work for a fitness technology company. You’re desperate to find the next big thing so you
commission a market research agency. It promises to provide a wealth of consumer feedback for a
sizeable sum. You agree.
In the following months, you define objectives, build a plan, refer it to an ethics committee, find a sample
audience, collect data through focus groups, phone interviews, and online surveys, before sending it off to
be analyzed.
The result? Customers want your product to be faster. Essentially, after six months you are left with
obvious conclusions.
Of course, not all traditional research works this way. Most endeavors deliver tangible and valuable results.
But it’s undeniably slow. At the speed your competitors move, waiting more than a month for an insight
can be debilitating.
Fortunately, social data can offer instant insight on consumers at an unparalleled scale. It may not
be the sole contributor for product development ideas, but it’s quickly becoming a vital part of the
research armory.
One company has made a success of developing product purely on the back of social media feedback.
By scouring historical eBay and Amazon reviews, CA Marketing developed products that answer the
frustrations of consumers and include most requested features.
CA collects reviews on thousands of products to discover what consumers want. One of the many
products it creates is a waterproof radio. By monitoring social, they saw a significant amount of people
wanted a rechargeable version. The team then built a rechargeable version and linked potential buyers to
their updated version.
This strategy may seem simple, but it’s successful. The team collects nine-figure sales annually, growing
at 30% year on year.
But historical data reveals far more than simply the volume of people discussing your product.
Metadata attached to each mention shows sentiment, author demographics, key topics of
conversation and much more.
This means you can pull granular insights about the specific components of your product. For example,
Amazon’s Kindle range can be analyzed by looking at the net positivity of different features on each
Kindle Model.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 15
Kindle Kindle Touch Wifi Kindle Touch 3G Kindle Fire
NET POSITIVITY OF KINDLE MODELS
NETPOSITIVITY–%OFTOTALMENTIONS
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
-5
• FEATURES • USABILITY • OTHER •SALES • PRICE
Historical data can be extraordinarily valuable for product development. If companies like CA Marketing
are able to generate nine-figure revenues by simply listening, surely all brands should do the same.
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 16
3.0 The Future for Historical
Research Using Social Data
All of the use-cases described throughout this guide can be implemented today.
As leaders in social listening, Brandwatch has developed greater historical functionality over the years
and possesses a rich backlog of historical data.
But as the functionality of listening platforms grow, access to historical data will continue to increase.
Clients should demand instant access to years of historical data, today. In the future, they can expect
machine-assisted analysis, to quickly interpret the data and pull insight.
3.1 How Brandwatch Can Help
Brandwatch, the leader in social listening, now provides unlimited historical data, going back three years.
The offer uses historical Twitter data, plus the full Brandwatch archive, to find reliable and valuable
insight. Unlike other vendors, Brandwatch collects and displays years of historical data in seconds,
allowing you to quickly uncover insight and iterate your search.
You can find out more about Brandwatch’s unparalleled historical offering by requesting a demo here.
3.2 Listen, Analyze and Act with Confidence
Find more value in the social data that’s important to your business with an advanced social media
monitoring and analytics platform.
We hope that you’ve found this guide useful.
In this guide and the others in the Social Listening in Practice series, we used Brandwatch Analytics for
the examples we gave you.
You can find out more and request a demo by visiting brandwatch.com/demo
Product Guide/ Historical Data	 © Brandwatch.com | 17
About Brandwatch
Brandwatch is the world’s leading social intelligence company. Brandwatch Analytics and Vizia products
fuel smarter decision making around the world.
The Brandwatch Analytics platform gathers millions of online conversations every day and provides users
with the tools to analyze them, empowering the world’s most admired brands and agencies to make
insightful, data-driven business decisions. Vizia distributes visually-engaging insights to the physical
places where the action happens.
The Brandwatch platform is used by over 1,200 brands and agencies, including Unilever, Cisco, Whirlpool,
British Airways, Heineken, Walmart and Dell. Brandwatch continues on its impressive business trajectory,
recently named a global leader in enterprise social listening platforms by the latest reports from several
independent research firms. Increasing its worldwide presence, the company has offices around the world
including Brighton, New York, San Francisco, Berlin, Stuttgart, Paris and Singapore.
Brandwatch. Now You Know.
www.brandwatch.com | @Brandwatch | press office | contact
Contact/
Email contact@brandwatch.com
Web brandwatch.com
Twitter @brandwatch
Telephone
US +1 212 229 2240
UK +44 (0)1273 234290
DE +49 (0)30 5683 7004-0
© Brandwatch.com

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...
Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...
Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...Brandwatch
 
The Social Outlook
The Social OutlookThe Social Outlook
The Social OutlookBrandwatch
 
Kohler: Client Case Talk - James Sandora
Kohler: Client Case Talk - James SandoraKohler: Client Case Talk - James Sandora
Kohler: Client Case Talk - James SandoraBrandwatch
 
Case Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listening
Case Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listeningCase Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listening
Case Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listeningBrandwatch
 
Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval
Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval
Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval Brandwatch
 
Case Study: Comic relief
Case Study: Comic relief Case Study: Comic relief
Case Study: Comic relief Brandwatch
 
Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...
Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...
Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...Brandwatch
 
Introducing Microsoft Social Listening
Introducing Microsoft Social Listening Introducing Microsoft Social Listening
Introducing Microsoft Social Listening Avtex
 
Developing A Social Strategy Webinar
Developing A Social Strategy WebinarDeveloping A Social Strategy Webinar
Developing A Social Strategy WebinarCharlene Li
 
Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010
Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010
Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010Shiv Singh
 
2016 Digital Marketing Strategies
2016 Digital Marketing Strategies2016 Digital Marketing Strategies
2016 Digital Marketing StrategiesKarenEman
 
Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...
Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...
Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...Julia Grosman
 
The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...
The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...
The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...Socialpanga
 
Engage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABM
Engage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABMEngage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABM
Engage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABMMarketo
 
Using Social to help Employee Engagement
Using Social to help Employee EngagementUsing Social to help Employee Engagement
Using Social to help Employee EngagementMichael Batistich
 
Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...
Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...
Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...Julia Grosman
 
Advanced Social Media Monitoring
Advanced Social Media MonitoringAdvanced Social Media Monitoring
Advanced Social Media MonitoringBlake Robinson
 
Why invest in influencer marketing
Why invest in influencer marketingWhy invest in influencer marketing
Why invest in influencer marketingTraackr
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...
Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...
Brandwatch & Conversocial: How to turn your social insights into proactive cu...
 
The Social Outlook
The Social OutlookThe Social Outlook
The Social Outlook
 
Kohler: Client Case Talk - James Sandora
Kohler: Client Case Talk - James SandoraKohler: Client Case Talk - James Sandora
Kohler: Client Case Talk - James Sandora
 
Case Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listening
Case Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listeningCase Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listening
Case Study: Empowering employee advocacy with social listening
 
Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval
Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval
Toyota’s Social Journey #TalkSocial - Jackie Sandoval
 
Case Study: Comic relief
Case Study: Comic relief Case Study: Comic relief
Case Study: Comic relief
 
Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...
Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...
Creating a Social Enterprise: Segmentation’s Critical Role in Uncovering Soci...
 
Why Video? How Video Builds Brands
Why Video? How Video Builds BrandsWhy Video? How Video Builds Brands
Why Video? How Video Builds Brands
 
Introducing Microsoft Social Listening
Introducing Microsoft Social Listening Introducing Microsoft Social Listening
Introducing Microsoft Social Listening
 
Developing A Social Strategy Webinar
Developing A Social Strategy WebinarDeveloping A Social Strategy Webinar
Developing A Social Strategy Webinar
 
How to Develop Media Budgets
How to Develop Media BudgetsHow to Develop Media Budgets
How to Develop Media Budgets
 
Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010
Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010
Social Influence Marketing Trends for 2010
 
2016 Digital Marketing Strategies
2016 Digital Marketing Strategies2016 Digital Marketing Strategies
2016 Digital Marketing Strategies
 
Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...
Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...
Eric Yale - How To Thrive in the Post-Digital Age - Tips and Case Studies for...
 
The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...
The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...
The Importance of Social Listening & ORM and 7 Actionable ways to utilize it ...
 
Engage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABM
Engage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABMEngage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABM
Engage Smarter, Close Faster: Add a Human Touch to ABM
 
Using Social to help Employee Engagement
Using Social to help Employee EngagementUsing Social to help Employee Engagement
Using Social to help Employee Engagement
 
Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...
Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...
Greg Stuart - Multi-Touch Attribution: Marketing Measurement’s Holy Grail or ...
 
Advanced Social Media Monitoring
Advanced Social Media MonitoringAdvanced Social Media Monitoring
Advanced Social Media Monitoring
 
Why invest in influencer marketing
Why invest in influencer marketingWhy invest in influencer marketing
Why invest in influencer marketing
 

Destacado

Understanding your Audience
Understanding your AudienceUnderstanding your Audience
Understanding your AudienceBrandwatch
 
Webinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of Excellence
Webinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of ExcellenceWebinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of Excellence
Webinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of ExcellenceBrandwatch
 
Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton
Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton
Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton Brandwatch
 
Brandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment Analysis
Brandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment AnalysisBrandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment Analysis
Brandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment AnalysisBrandwatch
 
Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...
Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...
Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...Brandwatch
 
Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social
Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social
Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social Brandwatch
 
AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...
AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...
AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...IAEME Publication
 
How to find cheap flights to rome
How to find cheap flights to romeHow to find cheap flights to rome
How to find cheap flights to romeSarah Brown
 
Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social
Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social
Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social Brandwatch
 
Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social
Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social
Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social Brandwatch
 

Destacado (10)

Understanding your Audience
Understanding your AudienceUnderstanding your Audience
Understanding your Audience
 
Webinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of Excellence
Webinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of ExcellenceWebinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of Excellence
Webinar: Revolutionize your Business with an Insights Center of Excellence
 
Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton
Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton
Wimbledon and Hill+Knowlton
 
Brandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment Analysis
Brandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment AnalysisBrandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment Analysis
Brandwatch Masterclass: Social Media & Sentiment Analysis
 
Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...
Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...
Reinventing Business with Social Command Centers (Beyond Social Media (WOM) T...
 
Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social
Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social
Doing more with Queries & Rules - Doing More With Social
 
AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...
AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...
AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT AND MEASUREMENT OF CUSTOMER FEASIBLILTY IN CONSTRUCT...
 
How to find cheap flights to rome
How to find cheap flights to romeHow to find cheap flights to rome
How to find cheap flights to rome
 
Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social
Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social
Client Case Study: Ditch The Label - Doing More With Social
 
Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social
Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social
Switching Mobile Provider - Doing More With Social
 

Similar a Unlimited Historical Data Guide

Audit Scope and Process
Audit Scope and ProcessAudit Scope and Process
Audit Scope and ProcessDaniel McKean
 
Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2
Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2
Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2Jon LeMire
 
How to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic Data
How to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic DataHow to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic Data
How to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic DataMolly O'Shea
 
Marketers: the future is ready for you now
Marketers: the future is ready for you nowMarketers: the future is ready for you now
Marketers: the future is ready for you nowTNS
 
Why Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean Westervelt
Why Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean WesterveltWhy Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean Westervelt
Why Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean WesterveltOnline Marketing Summit
 
Talkwalker White Paper No. 1
Talkwalker White Paper No. 1Talkwalker White Paper No. 1
Talkwalker White Paper No. 1Talkwalker
 
SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre
SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre
SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre Kunal Chaturvedi
 
Tns social media insights for growth
Tns social media  insights for growthTns social media  insights for growth
Tns social media insights for growthGabriella Bergaglio
 
The Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend Report
The Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend ReportThe Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend Report
The Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend ReportNurun
 
Social media analytics - 5 key trends
Social media analytics - 5 key trendsSocial media analytics - 5 key trends
Social media analytics - 5 key trendsNewspoint Sp. z o.o.
 
A Summary Of York Dungeon
A Summary Of York DungeonA Summary Of York Dungeon
A Summary Of York DungeonErin Ross
 
4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media
4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media 4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media
4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media Aravinth Rajagopalan
 
Infegy Social Analytics White Paper
Infegy Social Analytics White PaperInfegy Social Analytics White Paper
Infegy Social Analytics White PaperJohn Mumford
 
Relevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual Change
Relevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual ChangeRelevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual Change
Relevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual ChangeCognizant
 
Social Listening in Practice: Social Selling
Social Listening in Practice: Social SellingSocial Listening in Practice: Social Selling
Social Listening in Practice: Social SellingBrandwatch
 
Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)
Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)
Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)Hilary Ip
 
Business Analytics in Fashion marketing
Business Analytics in Fashion marketingBusiness Analytics in Fashion marketing
Business Analytics in Fashion marketingTaanyaGupta1
 
Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...
Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...
Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...PaloServices
 
Major trends and development in social media marketing v2
Major trends and development in social media marketing v2Major trends and development in social media marketing v2
Major trends and development in social media marketing v2Aventis School of Management
 

Similar a Unlimited Historical Data Guide (20)

Audit Scope and Process
Audit Scope and ProcessAudit Scope and Process
Audit Scope and Process
 
Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2
Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2
Turn Online Reviews into Data Driven Business Decisions-2
 
How to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic Data
How to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic DataHow to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic Data
How to Optimize Your Marketing Strategy using Facebook Topic Data
 
Marketers: the future is ready for you now
Marketers: the future is ready for you nowMarketers: the future is ready for you now
Marketers: the future is ready for you now
 
Why Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean Westervelt
Why Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean WesterveltWhy Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean Westervelt
Why Monitoring Your Online Brand is Essential for Business - Dean Westervelt
 
Talkwalker White Paper No. 1
Talkwalker White Paper No. 1Talkwalker White Paper No. 1
Talkwalker White Paper No. 1
 
SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre
SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre
SOUND: Social Intelligence Command Centre
 
Tns social media insights for growth
Tns social media  insights for growthTns social media  insights for growth
Tns social media insights for growth
 
The Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend Report
The Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend ReportThe Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend Report
The Future of Retail - Marketing and Merchandising Trend Report
 
Social media analytics - 5 key trends
Social media analytics - 5 key trendsSocial media analytics - 5 key trends
Social media analytics - 5 key trends
 
A Summary Of York Dungeon
A Summary Of York DungeonA Summary Of York Dungeon
A Summary Of York Dungeon
 
4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media
4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media 4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media
4 Steps to Drive Your Brand Extension Strategy with Social Media
 
Infegy Social Analytics White Paper
Infegy Social Analytics White PaperInfegy Social Analytics White Paper
Infegy Social Analytics White Paper
 
Relevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual Change
Relevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual ChangeRelevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual Change
Relevant Product Design Requires Keeping Up with Perpetual Change
 
Social Listening in Practice: Social Selling
Social Listening in Practice: Social SellingSocial Listening in Practice: Social Selling
Social Listening in Practice: Social Selling
 
Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)
Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)
Why Virality Can't Be Your Strategy by Noah Keil (Group Nine Media)
 
Business Analytics in Fashion marketing
Business Analytics in Fashion marketingBusiness Analytics in Fashion marketing
Business Analytics in Fashion marketing
 
Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...
Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...
Social Media Insights: 2018 Social Media Trends and Analytics Implications | ...
 
Creating a social_media_plan_rb
Creating a social_media_plan_rbCreating a social_media_plan_rb
Creating a social_media_plan_rb
 
Major trends and development in social media marketing v2
Major trends and development in social media marketing v2Major trends and development in social media marketing v2
Major trends and development in social media marketing v2
 

Más de Brandwatch

Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics
Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics
Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics Brandwatch
 
Brand protection & Crisis Aversion
Brand protection & Crisis AversionBrand protection & Crisis Aversion
Brand protection & Crisis AversionBrandwatch
 
Leveraging Insights with Creative Segmentation
Leveraging Insights with Creative SegmentationLeveraging Insights with Creative Segmentation
Leveraging Insights with Creative SegmentationBrandwatch
 
Life As a Brandwatch Analyst
Life As a Brandwatch AnalystLife As a Brandwatch Analyst
Life As a Brandwatch AnalystBrandwatch
 
Intelligence: The Fundamentals
Intelligence: The Fundamentals Intelligence: The Fundamentals
Intelligence: The Fundamentals Brandwatch
 
Control vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating Environment
Control vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating EnvironmentControl vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating Environment
Control vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating EnvironmentBrandwatch
 
Collective creativity for better intelligence
Collective creativity for better intelligenceCollective creativity for better intelligence
Collective creativity for better intelligenceBrandwatch
 
Ethics and humanity in the age of technology
Ethics and humanity in the age of technology Ethics and humanity in the age of technology
Ethics and humanity in the age of technology Brandwatch
 
Digital transformation in a regulated industry
Digital transformation in a regulated industry Digital transformation in a regulated industry
Digital transformation in a regulated industry Brandwatch
 
Emotional Intelligence
Emotional Intelligence Emotional Intelligence
Emotional Intelligence Brandwatch
 
25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets
25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets   25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets
25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets Brandwatch
 
PSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We Brand
PSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We BrandPSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We Brand
PSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We BrandBrandwatch
 
Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017
Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017
Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017Brandwatch
 
Telling a story with your social insights
Telling a story with your social insightsTelling a story with your social insights
Telling a story with your social insightsBrandwatch
 
Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2
Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2
Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2Brandwatch
 
How can social listening help to determine ROI?
How can social listening help to determine ROI?How can social listening help to determine ROI?
How can social listening help to determine ROI?Brandwatch
 
One step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their business
One step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their businessOne step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their business
One step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their businessBrandwatch
 
Today’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social Media
Today’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social MediaToday’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social Media
Today’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social MediaBrandwatch
 
Social Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to Customers
Social Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to CustomersSocial Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to Customers
Social Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to CustomersBrandwatch
 
Social Maturity
Social MaturitySocial Maturity
Social MaturityBrandwatch
 

Más de Brandwatch (20)

Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics
Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics
Identifying and Analyzing a target audience with Analytics
 
Brand protection & Crisis Aversion
Brand protection & Crisis AversionBrand protection & Crisis Aversion
Brand protection & Crisis Aversion
 
Leveraging Insights with Creative Segmentation
Leveraging Insights with Creative SegmentationLeveraging Insights with Creative Segmentation
Leveraging Insights with Creative Segmentation
 
Life As a Brandwatch Analyst
Life As a Brandwatch AnalystLife As a Brandwatch Analyst
Life As a Brandwatch Analyst
 
Intelligence: The Fundamentals
Intelligence: The Fundamentals Intelligence: The Fundamentals
Intelligence: The Fundamentals
 
Control vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating Environment
Control vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating EnvironmentControl vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating Environment
Control vs. Culture: The New Technology Operating Environment
 
Collective creativity for better intelligence
Collective creativity for better intelligenceCollective creativity for better intelligence
Collective creativity for better intelligence
 
Ethics and humanity in the age of technology
Ethics and humanity in the age of technology Ethics and humanity in the age of technology
Ethics and humanity in the age of technology
 
Digital transformation in a regulated industry
Digital transformation in a regulated industry Digital transformation in a regulated industry
Digital transformation in a regulated industry
 
Emotional Intelligence
Emotional Intelligence Emotional Intelligence
Emotional Intelligence
 
25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets
25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets   25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets
25 things we learned analyzing billions of tweets
 
PSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We Brand
PSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We BrandPSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We Brand
PSB + Aga Khan Foundation: United We Brand
 
Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017
Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017
Ditch the Label and Brandwatch: Mental Health Study, 2017
 
Telling a story with your social insights
Telling a story with your social insightsTelling a story with your social insights
Telling a story with your social insights
 
Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2
Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2
Combining Brandwatch and non Brandwatch data using Vizia 2
 
How can social listening help to determine ROI?
How can social listening help to determine ROI?How can social listening help to determine ROI?
How can social listening help to determine ROI?
 
One step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their business
One step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their businessOne step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their business
One step ahead: How Co-op uses Brandwatch to inform their business
 
Today’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social Media
Today’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social MediaToday’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social Media
Today’s Reality: Managing & Monitoring Campus Crises through Social Media
 
Social Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to Customers
Social Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to CustomersSocial Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to Customers
Social Truth: Revealing what Truly Matters to Customers
 
Social Maturity
Social MaturitySocial Maturity
Social Maturity
 

Último

Fintech app development company with financial management
Fintech app development company with financial managementFintech app development company with financial management
Fintech app development company with financial managementHazel Johnson
 
BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.
BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.
BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.lindseyjanelladuran
 
"Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos"
"Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos""Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos"
"Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos"SocioCosmos
 
THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...
THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...
THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...Riches General marchandise
 
Những điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thị
Những điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thịNhững điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thị
Những điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thịUreka Media Vietnam CO., LTD
 
Revolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive Deal
Revolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive DealRevolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive Deal
Revolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive DealSocioCosmos
 

Último (6)

Fintech app development company with financial management
Fintech app development company with financial managementFintech app development company with financial management
Fintech app development company with financial management
 
BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.
BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.
BLOGGING. PPT. PTASK. 10-ST.LEOTHEGREAT.
 
"Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos"
"Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos""Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos"
"Beyond Limits: Powering Your YouTube Ascent with Socio Cosmos"
 
THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...
THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...
THE DIGITAL MINE:Striking Gold in The Digital Mine: Attracting Leads and Maki...
 
Những điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thị
Những điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thịNhững điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thị
Những điều cơ bản về AI - Hướng dẫn hiểu và ứng dụng AI cho nhà tiếp thị
 
Revolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive Deal
Revolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive DealRevolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive Deal
Revolutionize Your Pinterest: Socio Cosmos Exclusive Deal
 

Unlimited Historical Data Guide

  • 1. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 1© Brandwatch.com Product Guide/ Historical Data
  • 2. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 2 Contents 1.0 Introduction����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������3 1.1 The Value of Historical Data�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������3 1.2 A New Landscape�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������4 2.0 Historical Data In Action������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5 2.1 Five Ws of Research�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5 2.2 Consumer Insight�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������5 2.3 Campaign Measurement ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������10 2.4 Competitor Intelligence �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������12 2.5 Product Development���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������14 3.0 The Future for Historical Research Using Social Data����������������������������������������16 3.1 How Brandwatch Can Help ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������16 3.2 Listen, Analyze and Act with Confidence���������������������������������������������������������������������16 About Brandwatch��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������17
  • 3. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 3 1.0 Introduction 1.1 The Value of Historical Data Historical context plays a fundamental role in shaping every aspect of the web. Every tweet, post, article and comment is influenced by the context in which it is written and the wider issues that frame it. An opinion is always affected by seasonality, global events, the cultural climate and even the virality of a meme. Without fully understanding the historical context of a post online, social analysts will struggle to draw reliable meaning from their data. In the absence of historical context, a number of assumptions must be made. These assumptions ultimately lead to biases that skew results and impair all insight. Your company may receive a surge in positive mentions straight after the release of a new advert during the summer. Using real-time data, you may assume this increase was in direct response to the advert. Moreover, you may conclude that the advert is successful as it caused your largest spike in mentions. However, with years worth of historical data, you could uncover a very different conclusion. You may discover that a surge in mentions always appears during the summer and the advert actually made no significant impact. You could look back and see that past adverts generated far more mentions than your recent release, which in comparison, performed poorly. YEARLY JOB EMOTION 1:1 2:1 3:1 4:1 5:1 JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DECJUNMAYAPR MARFEBJAN 2015 2016 RATIOLOVE:HATE MOST LOVE LEAST LOVE Brandwatch and Monster analyzed over 2 million mentions from US employees, the data shows how attitudes towards jobs changes over a year.
  • 4. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 4 Although this error feels elementary, it is not uncommon. The majority of brands still don’t use social data for research and those that do often don’t work with historical data. In fact, Altimeter research shows that while marketing is represented in 70% of social business strategy meetings, market research is present just 15% of the time. That should not be the case. Data-driven insights should be foundational to business decisions1 . 1.2 A New Landscape In the very early years of social media monitoring, historical analysis was impossible. Success depended on boosting the number of followers and likes for a single month. Organizations could only compare themselves to their competitors. To-date, Brandwatch has collected six years of archived data, which can be quickly searched and analyzed. In addition, we've upgraded our historical features, letting users gather an unlimited number of historical insights at unprecedented speed. The functionality is available, but why should you start using it for all of your analysis? 1 Altimeter. The 2015 State of Social Business: Priorities Shift from Scaling to Integrating. 2015.
  • 5. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 5 2.0 Historical Data In Action As social listening platforms cultivate growing archives of historical data, the applications of social data have become varied. Use-cases which involve discovering consumer insights, measuring previous campaigns, benchmarking against competitors and fueling product development, can all be enhanced with the input of historical data. But before you embark on a detailed analysis of past conversations, you should first consider the research basics. A starting point for all historical research should be the “five Ws”. This process helps focus your research and ensures you produce actionable results. 2.1 Five Ws of Research Why - Why are you carrying out this research? Are you looking for a way to improve your product’s design or an avenue to invest marketing resources into? Who - Who are you researching? Does your analysis solely examine customers? If so what demographics and psychographics are you focusing on? Note that conversation from different segments change over time. A group of critics who talk about you today, may not have six months ago. What - What are your goals? If your research is focused on product development, what features are you focusing on? Create a short brief that details your goals. When - What time frame do you wish to look at? Are you looking at a large dataset containing years, or a small sample from a specific month? In practice, a longer time frame is more reliable. Where - Which channels and locations are you most concerned about? How will you factor in owned posts on one channel compared to another? Once you have worked through each of these points, you should find it easier to focus your work and achieve each goal. For example, Monster, a client of Brandwatch, used a similar framework when they conducted research on the American job market. Monster carried out its research to better understand how Americans spoke about their jobs online (why). The research looked at social media users from the U.S.A who posted opinions about their job (who / where). Monster aimed to find if Americans loved or hated their job and how this changed based on a user’s demographics and psychographics (what), over two years (when). The more tightly defined the questions, the more beneficial the research is likely to be.
  • 6. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 6 2.2 Consumer Insight Case Study: Predicting Purchases A full history of consumers’ online mentions will help any brand uncover actionable insights and ultimately make smarter business decisions. One of our clients, a large beauty retailer in America, used historical data to look at how it distributed stock. The company had a niche issue. Its diverse product range contained high-value goods and the organization couldn’t always be sure it was distributing the right stock to the right stores. In closed-locations, like American airports, the beauty retailer knew how important it was to fill the store with goods that would entice the footfall. However, the customer range at different airports was so varied, the retailer couldn’t pin down which products would work best. Traditional means of matching sales with new stock did not work. Sales data showed demand varied greatly and no consistent themes prevailed. The beauty retailer turned to historical social data to find an answer. The research team used search terms to collect geo-tagged social conversation from within each airport. Using Brandwatch classification options, the brand segmented this data and tracked the purchase intent for beauty products at each location. #BrandwatchTips: The geo-tagged component in Brandwatch can reveal where a tweet was published right down to street-level. Backlogging this data over three years immediately revealed trends for each location. Some locations showed consistent conversation over time expressing a desire to purchase high-end handbags, while other airports provoked discussion about designer wristwatches.
  • 7. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 7 •HANDBAGS •WATCHES •PERFUME •CLOTHING SEATTLE HOUSTON CHICAGO JFK MIAMI LOS ANGELES This smart use of historical data allowed this brand to implement a customer-focused solution, however, this story doesn’t end there. After collecting the insight using historical data, the beauty retailer was able to implement reactive marketing techniques using real-time data. Tracking conversation as it came in, the retailer immediately identified a spike in conversation about a specific product in a specific airport. When this spike occurred, the retailer changed the in-store digital display to show adverts for the products creating the spike. For example, a growth in conversation about designer earrings would trigger an alert in Brandwatch, which the marketers used to change the storefront display. #BrandwatchTips: Use Signals to monitor conversations about your brand. If volumes breach a predetermined threshold, you’ll receive an Alert. Social data provided a smart flexible response to a long-standing problem. The bespoke stock distribution based on personalized consumer preferences caused a bump in sales in stores across America.
  • 8. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 8 The Significance of Seasonality All online conversation is affected by seasonality. To pull reliable consumer insights, you need to understand how seasonality will affect your data. Although large seasonal events, like holidays, can produce predictable results at a large scale, determining the effect of seasonality isn’t always clean-cut. Your brand might buck the trend, or your product might deviate from expectations. In the ice cream industry, sales tend to rise in summer and drop in winter. It is a seasonal industry and the majority of products follow this correlation. It would be easy to assume that this is the same for all types of ice cream, and that your brand fits within the trend. But this assumption doesn’t stay true for everyone. Unilever put this to the test. Their consumer insights team collected every mention from consumers who expressed a desire to purchase Ben Jerry’s ice cream, going back multiple years. Plotting this data on a line graph didn’t show a clear peak in summer and drop in winter. Instead, it showed a line, with spikes in conversation, gradually increasing each year. Clearly, the seasonality affecting the industry wasn’t affecting this brand. But that didn’t mean seasonality didn’t exist. Unilever took this historical data and compared it to weather data to see if specific weather types provoked a desire to purchase the brand. Blending these two data sets revealed a surprising correlation. Consistently, over previous years, rainy weather encouraged consumers to purchase tubs of Ben Jerry’s ice cream. So unlike the wider industry, rain was provoking purchases, rather than the sunshine. AS THE TEMPERATURE DECREASED, INTENT-TO-PURCHASE MENTIONS ROSE This data transformed the way the brand advertised its products online. Using smart, responsive online ad banners, Unilever increased the distribution of adverts when rain was scheduled and optimized its digital advertising budget.
  • 9. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 9 Three Types of Seasonality It’s clear that seasonality isn’t as obvious as we might assume. It doesn’t follow strict rules that stay true for all brands. It’s unpredictable and changes dramatically from one brand to the next. So, what should you look out for and how can you use historical data to find it? First, you have to know what to look for. Capitalize are three levels of seasonality: societal, industry-based and brand-based. Each level contains different factors that affect social data. 1. Societal seasonality This refers to the overarching trends that appear to affect society as a whole. For example, the conversations about purchasing goods peak during the holidays. 0 10000 20000 30000 JAN 14 JUL 14 JAN 15 JUL 15 JUL 16JAN 16 MENTIONVOLUME JUL 13 CONVERSATION ABOUT CHRISTMAS GIFTS OVER TIME 2. Industry seasonality This is the conversation that changes based on the industry you’re looking at. For example, conversations about all types of bathing suits increase during the summer. MENTIONVOLUME 0 300 600 900 1200 SEP 13 JAN 14 MAY 14 SEP 14 JAN 15 MAY 15 SEP 15 JAN 16 MAY 16 SEP 16 CONVERSATION ABOUT SWIMMING OVER TIME
  • 10. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 10 3. Brand seasonality Even brands experience seasonality. Here changes occur for companies that don’t affect the industry they’re part of. For example, Ben Jerry’s generate intent to purchase conversation about its ice cream during the winter season as rain becomes more frequent. Having an awareness of each type of seasonality lets you seek out predictable changes that recur in your data. Doing so will allow you to factor in fluctuations in data and collect reliable results from your social listening platform. #BrandwatchTips: Chart mentions over time to look for seasonality factors like vacations, business cycles or national holidays. Collect historical data for your wider industry, direct competitors, individual brand and owned products, and map it over a number of years. Analyze trends and look for peaks and troughs that affect every segment, showing societal or industry seasonality. Then search for recurring spikes in mentions for only your brand or products – these could indicate brand seasonality. Document each of these and compare them to live data. That way you can see if fluctuations in conversation today are following clear seasonal trends, or if they are unique. Doing so will help reduce the margin of error in your analysis. Social Platform Context In addition to seasonality changes, brands on social media are also affected by slight changes to the networks themselves. While your brand may grow in response to your marketing efforts, the platform you use to broadcast your message may grow as well. Researchers should factor this in when assessing the growth of a brand. If conversation about your industry on Twitter is growing by 2% month on month, all conversation about the brand should grow by the same amount. With historical data, you can compare the growth trend of your brand with the platform you're using. 2.3 Campaign Measurement Case Study: Measuring Valuable Hype With historical data, campaign measurement becomes more reliable and valuable. You can quickly compare a campaign to all your previous work to determine its success.
  • 11. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 11 THE RELEASE PROCESS This is vital for video game publishers, as investments in marketing campaigns grow dramatically. In 2015, the industry spent $630 million on TV advertisements alone. But TV is just one element. Campaigns now include announcements, teaser content, trailers, public keynotes, demos and more. Understanding how these affect sales figures is a key task for any major publisher. ANNOUNCEMENT TEASER CONTENT DEMO DLCRELEASE However, when analyzing its recent release, a Brandwatch client realized that spikes in mentions didn’t impact on whether people actually bought the game. The hype didn’t equate to sales, so to speak. Detailed research intending to find which types of conversations lead to sales was carried out using years of historical data. By listening exclusively for language relating to pre-ordering the game, the organization separated generic conversation from the intent to purchase conversation. Analysis of the pre-launch conversation surrounding two different games uncovered the answer. The publisher found that Game 1 generated more mentions than Game 2, but less intent to purchase mentions. Subsequently, Game 2 generated more sales overall, suggesting that intent to purchase mentions correlated with actual sales. TOTAL MENTIONS TOTAL INTENT TO PURCHASE MENTIONS TOTAL SALES AFTER ONE WEEK 70,143 GAME 1 1,295 300,000 GAME 2 30,456 4,012 600,000 What became clear, from measuring a number of previous campaigns, was that indiscriminate hype, measured by total mentions, did not necessarily equate to sales. Simply monitoring buzz as a campaign goal may not be enough to make confident predictions about a campaign’s success, nor is it a valid metric to measure the effectiveness of different marketing activities. #BrandwatchTips: Listen for language that suggests people are keen to buy your products - “I can’t wait for the new Call of Duty This smart use of historical data validated the importance of monitoring social conversation during campaigns. The unsolicited, unbiased, open communication from the web provided a reliable way to
  • 12. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 12 measure demand. 2.4 Competitor Intelligence Case Study: Exploring New Markets In the last 15 years, 52% of the Fortune 500 have disappeared from the list. Simply put, competition is harsher than ever. Having a clear awareness of your competitor’s actions and how customers react is paramount. Almost every brand is interested in learning how competitors have performed and how its performance rates in comparison. Figures mean nothing in a vacuum, so benchmarking can be crucial to getting a true understanding of success. With historical data, you can capitalize on the same insights you’ve found for your brand by applying them to your direct competition. For Tesla Motors, access to historical competitive insight became vital when they explored plans to expand into the Mexican market. Tesla wanted to better understand the conversation surrounding gasoline-powered cars vs. hybrid cars vs. electric cars and how it changed over time. Using historical data Tesla concluded that Mexican conversation about hybrid cars was minimal, while the conversation about electric cars was on the rise. 1500 1000 2000 500 0 11 JAN 25 JAN 8 FEB 22 FEB 7 MAR 21 MAR 4 APR 18 APR 2 MAY 16 MAY CONVERSATION ABOUT TYPES OF CARS •GASOLINE POWERED •ELECTRIC •HYBRID MENTIONSVOLUME Competitors in the hybrid and gasoline industry weren’t generating the same buzz as the electric car
  • 13. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 13 industry. This suggested that Tesla’s products might fit the market. But the automotive manufacturer didn’t stop there. With access to historical data, Tesla was able to listen to the unfiltered opinion of thousands of prospective clients and competitors' clients over the past three years. Historical data was used to create Categories around key online topics. Broken down, this data revealed how conversation differed between Tesla and its competitors. • TECHNOLOGY • PRICE • BATTERY/CHARGER • DESIGN • ACCELERATION • ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT • ECONOMIC INCENTIVES 25% 15% 40% 36% 27% 13% 11% 8% 10% 7% 3% 0% 3% 1% TESLA ELECTRIC CARS TOPICS THAT DOMINATED ONLINE CONVERSATION The data indicated that while audiences who discussed electric cars were mainly interested in the environmental impact, Tesla’s audience showed a clear interest in technology and price. This information is key when it comes to positioning the brand in this new market. It’s only a piece of the puzzle, but for Tesla, historical data was vital in assessing the competitive landscape.
  • 14. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 14 2.5 Product Development Case Study: Profitable Product Feedback For many brands, fast product development is required to meet consumer needs and keep up with agile competitors. However, identifying exactly what consumers want can be a slow and painstaking process. Let’s say you work for a fitness technology company. You’re desperate to find the next big thing so you commission a market research agency. It promises to provide a wealth of consumer feedback for a sizeable sum. You agree. In the following months, you define objectives, build a plan, refer it to an ethics committee, find a sample audience, collect data through focus groups, phone interviews, and online surveys, before sending it off to be analyzed. The result? Customers want your product to be faster. Essentially, after six months you are left with obvious conclusions. Of course, not all traditional research works this way. Most endeavors deliver tangible and valuable results. But it’s undeniably slow. At the speed your competitors move, waiting more than a month for an insight can be debilitating. Fortunately, social data can offer instant insight on consumers at an unparalleled scale. It may not be the sole contributor for product development ideas, but it’s quickly becoming a vital part of the research armory. One company has made a success of developing product purely on the back of social media feedback. By scouring historical eBay and Amazon reviews, CA Marketing developed products that answer the frustrations of consumers and include most requested features. CA collects reviews on thousands of products to discover what consumers want. One of the many products it creates is a waterproof radio. By monitoring social, they saw a significant amount of people wanted a rechargeable version. The team then built a rechargeable version and linked potential buyers to their updated version. This strategy may seem simple, but it’s successful. The team collects nine-figure sales annually, growing at 30% year on year. But historical data reveals far more than simply the volume of people discussing your product. Metadata attached to each mention shows sentiment, author demographics, key topics of conversation and much more. This means you can pull granular insights about the specific components of your product. For example, Amazon’s Kindle range can be analyzed by looking at the net positivity of different features on each Kindle Model.
  • 15. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 15 Kindle Kindle Touch Wifi Kindle Touch 3G Kindle Fire NET POSITIVITY OF KINDLE MODELS NETPOSITIVITY–%OFTOTALMENTIONS 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 • FEATURES • USABILITY • OTHER •SALES • PRICE Historical data can be extraordinarily valuable for product development. If companies like CA Marketing are able to generate nine-figure revenues by simply listening, surely all brands should do the same.
  • 16. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 16 3.0 The Future for Historical Research Using Social Data All of the use-cases described throughout this guide can be implemented today. As leaders in social listening, Brandwatch has developed greater historical functionality over the years and possesses a rich backlog of historical data. But as the functionality of listening platforms grow, access to historical data will continue to increase. Clients should demand instant access to years of historical data, today. In the future, they can expect machine-assisted analysis, to quickly interpret the data and pull insight. 3.1 How Brandwatch Can Help Brandwatch, the leader in social listening, now provides unlimited historical data, going back three years. The offer uses historical Twitter data, plus the full Brandwatch archive, to find reliable and valuable insight. Unlike other vendors, Brandwatch collects and displays years of historical data in seconds, allowing you to quickly uncover insight and iterate your search. You can find out more about Brandwatch’s unparalleled historical offering by requesting a demo here. 3.2 Listen, Analyze and Act with Confidence Find more value in the social data that’s important to your business with an advanced social media monitoring and analytics platform. We hope that you’ve found this guide useful. In this guide and the others in the Social Listening in Practice series, we used Brandwatch Analytics for the examples we gave you. You can find out more and request a demo by visiting brandwatch.com/demo
  • 17. Product Guide/ Historical Data © Brandwatch.com | 17 About Brandwatch Brandwatch is the world’s leading social intelligence company. Brandwatch Analytics and Vizia products fuel smarter decision making around the world. The Brandwatch Analytics platform gathers millions of online conversations every day and provides users with the tools to analyze them, empowering the world’s most admired brands and agencies to make insightful, data-driven business decisions. Vizia distributes visually-engaging insights to the physical places where the action happens. The Brandwatch platform is used by over 1,200 brands and agencies, including Unilever, Cisco, Whirlpool, British Airways, Heineken, Walmart and Dell. Brandwatch continues on its impressive business trajectory, recently named a global leader in enterprise social listening platforms by the latest reports from several independent research firms. Increasing its worldwide presence, the company has offices around the world including Brighton, New York, San Francisco, Berlin, Stuttgart, Paris and Singapore. Brandwatch. Now You Know. www.brandwatch.com | @Brandwatch | press office | contact
  • 18. Contact/ Email contact@brandwatch.com Web brandwatch.com Twitter @brandwatch Telephone US +1 212 229 2240 UK +44 (0)1273 234290 DE +49 (0)30 5683 7004-0 © Brandwatch.com