Jon Stewart Has 451% Worth of Fun with Twitter

It’s fair to say we were pleased when CNN aired our analysis of Twitter’s reaction to the State of the Union address.

We were thrilled when the Huffington Post quoted CNN SVP David Bohrman as saying, “This is light-years beyond what we’ve done”

So imagine our delight when Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show picked up the story in last night’s show.  (See 2:15)

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Well, sort of.  He may have in fact said, “I’ve never seen a situation where more information helped me understand less.”

Ouch.

But hey, it was 75 seconds of a pretty packed 22 minutes, maybe people forgot about it? We turned to Twitter (of course) to find out.

TDSChart2

Based on Tweets from today, Stewart’s (4 minutes long) take on Chris Matthews’s momentary venture into 1932 was the star of show, with 32% of total praise. In contrast, Stewart’s segment on our analysis barely drew more attention than Doris Kearns’s interview (5 min) with a scant 12%. That’s just a fraction of the total humor produced on that show.

Of course, per second of screen time, Stewart’s Twitter rant generated 28% more praise than his comments on Matthews and 451% more than his interview with Kearns. So maybe it was funny, after all.  What was that again about having more information?

Crimson Hexagon supplies some of the magic in the ‘Magic Wall’ on CNN’s post-SOTU coverage

Last night, Crimson Hexagon’s analysis of over 200,000 tweets pertaining to the State of the Union Address was featured on CNN’s post-speech coverage. Broken down state by state, our technology helped John King and Wolf Blitzer report in real-time what people on Twitter thought of President Obama’s speech. We are very excited about our new relationship with CNN and hope to be making more appearances on the ‘magic wall’ in the near future!

Room 214 Announces Strategic Partnership With Crimson Hexagon

Today, Boulder, Colorado-based social media agency Room 214 announced that they chose Crimson Hexagon as a key strategic partner to provide next generation opinion analysis and monitoring to extend their social media research and business intelligence offerings.

Room 214 has been creating interpretive analyses of user generated content and aggregated online data since 2006. They remain tool-agnostic and are leveraging our monitoring platform to help large brands better distill opinions and meaning from social networking properties and online conversations.

The social media agency was one of two early enterprise agency partners we began working with in 2009.  Their insightful product feedback, deep understanding of our platform, and analyst resources make them an ideal partner to deliver and extend the value of our software.

Room 214 co-founder James Clark feels, “In stark contrast to straight up sentiment analysis, Crimson Hexagon data provides the intelligence to drill deeper into relevant opinions in the online conversation to better align marketing strategies and initiatives that incorporate the voice of the customer.”

In fact, one of the key reasons Room 214 chose Crimson Hexagon was that our opinion monitors go far beyond automated sentiment, which in their words is unreliable and only provides a breakdown of positive, negative or neutral conversations.

We are excited about this relationship and the great potential it has going forward.  As strategic partners, we are working closely together on product feedback, training, joint marketing and selling initiatives.

Seesmic’s New Look A Crowd Pleaser

Being a little Twitter obsessed here, we couldn’t help but notice that Seesmic released the brand-new Seesmic Look yesterday. Touted as featuring extensive upgrades to the UI, the product is aimed at making social media adoption easier for consumers.  As founder Loic Le Meur put it, “We were challenged to reach out to an untapped market – a mainstream audience not familiar with Twitter – [...] (think “Mom” or “Dad”), that heard of Twitter but were never interested, or never had the opportunity to have a positive and friendly experience.”

So how’d they do?  We went to Twitter to find out.

VoxTrot Opinion Breakdown of Twitter Conversation

VoxTrot Opinion Breakdown of Twitter Conversation

Overall reaction was fairly positive, with about 60% of Tweets praising the design, although a small portion of these (9% of total) felt that the product still lacked key functionality.  This mirrored about the feelings of about another quarter of Tweeters who were generally unimpressed or were sticking with arch-rival Tweetdeck.  Some users didn’t have a choice in staying put; Seesmic Look isn’t available on Macs, as about 11% of the conversation pointed out.

Seesmic’s done a great job with the release and we’re looking forward to Tweetdeck’s response over the next few months.  In the meantime, we’re battening down the social media hatches for Apple’s tablet mystery product reveal next week.

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Scott Brown Wins Social Media Gold in Massachusetts Senate Election

Here in Cambridge, MA, every other TV commercial for the last two weeks has been a senate campaign spot. Yesterday, Republican Scott Brown beat Democrat Martha Coakley in the Massachusetts special election after taking full advantage of social media campaign tools. Now that the dust from the election has settled, we decided to take a look at the online conversation about the election and see if claims that Brown’s campaign dominated the social media arena were true. This is what we found:

Tweets On Election Day

CH Blog - Brown Twitter

Yes, social media strongly favored Scott Brown.

-          41% of tweets specifically favored Brown, referencing votes, time and money given to him.

-          An additional 9% were anti-Coakley for her political views and poorly run campaign

-          A further 21% were conservatives happy that stopping Coakley meant hamstringing the Obama agenda in the senate as well (mostly focused on health care and carbon cap and trade)

-          Even the 16% of tweets that were anti-Brown focused mostly on him being too liberal

The lonely few pro-Coakley Twitterers managed to capture 9% of the overall conversation flow and their candidate took 47% at the polls.

Blogs And Forums Throughout The Campaign

CH Blog - Brown Blogs

CH Blog - Trends

Analysis of conversations on blogs and forums showed similar results to the Twittersphere of pro-Brown, anti-Coakley, and anti-Obama sentiment over the course of the campaign, though Coakley’s support was twice that of what it was in Twitter. With access to more than 140 characters at a time, bloggers and forum-dwellers tend to express many opinions over the course of one post, so our categories were a little broader to reflect this (it turns out people who disliked Coakley tended to also think that Scott Brown is great.)

Monitoring over time revealed a brief bump in the conversation focused on stopping Obama’s agenda on 1/8. On that day, Scott Brown appeared on Sean Hannity’s show, bringing a more national, conservative audience to the Massachusetts race. Over the rest of the race, the sentiment held steadily.

CES: The good (3D), the bad (AT&T), and the boring (exhibit space)

Last week, tens of thousands of tech junkies flocked to Las Vegas for the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES), eager to get their hands on the latest electronic gadgets, network with like-minded professionals, and maybe catch a glimpse of visiting celebrities. With so many savvy users in the same place, it’s no surprise that the event generated a massive Twitter buzz. We thought it would be interesting to let loose our VoxTrot Opinion technology on the CES-related tweetstream – here’s what we learned.ces

New TV and 3D technologies overwhelmingly garnered the most praise on Twitter, led by the Boxee Box, which directly links internet content to your TV, and four separate television manufacturers who launched 3D sets. The Boxee Box took top honors in the “Last Gadget Standing” competition for most exciting new gadget at CES (as judged by audience applause).

Mobile technology also got people at CES excited, making up 15% of relevant CES related tweets. This conversation was driven mostly by Google’s Nexus One, RCA Airnergy’s wireless charger and FLO TV’s mobile live TV player. There were far too many new gadgets to create a category for each of them, but rave reviews for all other consumer electronics at CES made up fully one fifth of tweets.

Not everyone was satisfied with what they saw at CES, however.

  • Ten percent of people were less than impressed with the new technologies and exhibits they saw at CES. Some thought that 3D TVs and games were gimmicky, while others simply didn’t see anything that wow’ed them
  • Another 13% thought that the atmosphere at CES was lacking, especially as compared to last year. This included seeing lower profile displays, fewer giveaways and fewer “booth babes”
  • Finally, AT&T frustrated many iPhone users with spotty 3G and wireless coverage at the Las Vegas convention. The increasingly popular hashtag #attfail saw a lot of use as tech junkies lashed out at AT&T (13% of conversation)

With CES 2010 now a memory and a whole year of new technology ahead of us, we know that people will continue to tweet about their favorite (and least favorite) gadgets – and Crimson Hexagon will be right there to measure the conversation.

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