Christian Blanchas relied on the latest Attention Rate Barometer to analyse banks’ communication strategies and their impacts on internet users. He came to the conclusion that in spite of its effort at communicating, the banking sector is no longer able to catch French people’s attention – a situation that typically calls for crisis communication solutions. What is the best advice for a bank faced with customers that won’t listen anymore? Keep quiet? How about following the example set by Toyota?
The team @ TrendyBuzz is happy to announce its new feature, updated in real time: TrendyBuzz mapping!
Amongst the WebTrackers that collect online messages regarding your brands, competitors or your strategic environment, you can now visualize, in real time, the interactions among the 100 most dynamic, influential or powerful sources (news sites, blogs, forums or social networks). The objective is to:
- Have an immediate overview of the websites that should be taken into account for your eReputation management strategy.
- Apprehend how information navigates amongst journalists, bloggers and consumers, so as to understand their respective level of influence.
- Draw a list of the sources that enjoy the highest level of interaction with opinion leaders (number of backlinks & outlinks).
- Unveil the main primary and secondary universes for the brand.
- Grasp how your competitors’ communication strategies evolve through time.
…
Should you have any additional question, or simply fancy trying TrendyBuzz mapping, feel free to get in touch with us.
Sibylle Lhopiteau dedicated a series of articles to the dos and don’ts of eReputation management – a highly detailed piece of writing, based on the assumption that any internet user may equally be a potential customer or a powerful detractor. The article, published on January 15th 2010 mentions TrendyBuzz, Attention-Rate and WASALive.
Although reputation has always been, to some extent, part of any corporation’s strategic decision, the increasing importance of the social web has made companies’ eReputation (and its management) a core element of their strategy.
We highly recommend that the article (in French) be added to your reading list.
Most noticeable points regarding the classification of the 50 brands that generated the most attention on the French web in December 2009:
The two leaders, Twitter and Google, are still very much ahead of their challengers. Google’s launch of the Nexus One is very likely to increase their online attention, as the product is already showing up as a tag related to the brand. Google has embarked upon the business of creating attention around its products: Chrome (enjoying a 4×3 poster campaign in Paris, a real paradigm shift!), Nexus One (already) and Wave. Twitter’s attention results from its being compared with other networks – its main corresponding tags being Facebook, Google and Youtube!
The three challengers reveal a stagnating Microsoft (Windows 7? Old news already?) and a decreasing Apple. A major announcement is expected from Apple late January (the famous tablet?), the Attention Rate Barometer will unveil the buzz preceding Apple’s revolutions. To be continued…
A few other points:
. Yahoo and Ebay are coming back thanks to the communities. Two explanations: Xmas and the “second hand” effect for Ebay.
. HTC is already benefiting from producing Google’s Nexus One.
. Not only is TF1 the French leading brand (thanks to football games and the Miss France beauty pageant) but it is the main contributor to its competitors’ attention rate (main tag for France2 and M6!).
. RTL is truly benefiting from Johnny Halliday’s troubles…
. Renault’s attention rate is decreasing but it remains a leading brand on the French web. The brand’s conviction following an employee’s suicide greatly impacted upon its online attention, though.
. No such trouble for Orange …, the brand was not bothered by France Telecom’s poorly reputation. The phone business is pushed forward by the arrival of Free as a fourth mobile phone contractor.
. Still no names from the luxury or retail industry, although Ikea (55th) and Channel (61st) are coming closer.
We highly recommend that you read « Internet a tout changé », by Henri Kaufman, Laurence Faguer and Mickael Guillois (foreword by Brice Auckenthaler) to ease happily into 2010.
300 pages dedicated to the new behaviours and trends so familiar to those who are passionate about digital relationships, in consultancies or companies, that now rule marketing, R&D, sales, PR or CRM practices.
You will find TrendyBuzz and WASALive (international online trends in real time) mentioned on page 108, as professional tools for buzz monitoring. While TrendyBuzz has been designed for maketing and communication specialists, WASALive is a free tool available to anyone online.
“WASALive V3 is a real « buzz engine » that shows keywords’ diffusion on various media, timeline of the messages or their TrendyRank [level of influence] …”
Jérôme Bouteiller – Neteco (14th december 2009)
>> Live international buzz
A tag cloud, on the home page, shows the most common themes broached by worldwide web users, so you know what the hot topics are, for each language. Messages are scanned in French, English, Spanish, Italian, German, Dutch, Polish, Russian and Arabic.
>> Automatic interpretation indicators
3 graphs are automatically generated to complete the search results:
. Messages sorted by media types: Where is a specific topic being discussed? News sites? Blogs? Social web?
. Timeline of messages: How is the topic evolving? Is the buzz increasing, decreasing or stagnating?
. Messages sorted by level of influence: Is the topic being discussed by influencers or by the long tail?
>> Top10 of most viral videos
On the home page, get a glimpse of the most embedded videos online. And on the dedicated page, get the Top10, completed with the latest posts or articles where the videos have been published. You can switch from one language to the other.
The third opus of the barometre brings along a clear acceleration. While it remained fairly stable over September and October, the attention rate volume suddenly increased by 23 % in November, a media equivalence of 220,000 new messages (understand a message as a substantial article published on the front page of a wel-known daily newspaper). And the research corpus cannot account for this increase. Although Trendybuzz constantly expands this corpus, so as to scan as many relevant sources as possible, November was in no way exceptional.
Although the attention rate volume has clearly increased, major trends remain:
Google and Twitter are still ahead, the latter first in line in November thanks to its new feature: the lists
Apple and Facebook are following, and have left Microsoft hovering behind while they enjoy an average monthly increase of 16 %
the yet unchallenged top5 is followed by another fairly constant top5, including TF1, Renault, La Poste, Youtube and Sony
SFR follows and still stands as an exception: the only French brand whose audience mainly comes from online communities and social web
as a whole, the top25 is getting fairly constant and robust
it still does not include any name from the retail or luxury industries. Chanel ranks 72nd, McDonalds 87th and Carrefour 99th.
Monthly benchmark of the 50 brands that best capture their audiences’ attention in their discussions online on the French-speaking web – October 2009.
. New features for october.
. Trends for october.
. Classification by sectors.
Paris, October 5th, 2009 – groupeReflect, interactive and relational marketing agency, and TrendyBuzz, agency specialized in influence management, buzz monitoring and eReputation valuation, published their second Attention Marketing Barometer:
October Top10 :
Rank
Rank N-1
Brand
Country
TNS*
Attention Rate*
1
2
Google
USA
193838
583949
2
1
Twitter
USA
-
570182
3
3
Apple
USA
3131050
292188
4
4
Facebook
USA
-
272277
5
5
Microsoft
USA
3417178
249070
6
8
TF1
France
4863938
125290
7
9
La
Poste
France
2144880
122885
8
11
YouTube
USA
-
121401
9
7
Sony
Japan
14168705
97078
10
6
Renault
France
28069197
94190
New features for october:
With the lastest edition, groupeReflect & TrendyBuzz introduced 3 main Novelties:
• The main keywords that compose the brand’s attention are now displayed so as to appreciate the trends, whether positive or negative,
• A classification which indicates the importance of the sectors that compose the Top50, and which gives the 3 sectors that best capture their audience’s attention,
• The ultimate marketing tool: the possibility to download a widget that allows its users to display the barometre and its updates, in real time, on corporate sites, blogs or marketing-oriented intranets.
French northern regional newspaper ‘La Voix du Nord’ added the live news widget WASALive! to its website.
Visitors can now follow the most popular topics on the web (news sites, communities, blogs and social networks), in real time, directly from the newspaper’s homepage, lavoixdunord.fr. With just one click, they can access the lastest articles published by La Voix du Nord.
About WASALive!
WASALive! is the European search engine dedicated to live news. A tag cloud gives, in real time, the most popular themes, everywhere in Europe. A single click on any topic generates automatically a web review including all the latest publications.
WASALive! Toolbar for Firefox allows its users to follow the information directly from their browser, in 7 different languages. Updated in real time, the toolbar shows all the latest news (from news sites, blogs, communities, social networks etc.). An excellent way to first detect new trends and test the power of the TrendyBuzz technology.
WASALive! Toolbar for Firefox enjoys a confortable visibility on the internet and was recently referenced on Cnet.com, as well as on the official Mozilla Foundation website.
“For the Attention Marketing Barometer, TrendyBuzz scans over 130 000 French-speaking sources and takes into consideration all influence factors specific to the French and French-speaking web. The Attention Rate dispatches its value according to 4 main categories of expression channels on the web: quotes and articles published on mass media websites; publications, posts and comments from blogs; topics and messages discussed amongst communities (on forums and social media networks), then corporate or e-commerce websites, specialized publications, and other online documents.”