The Limitations of Tracking Blog Buzz

Posted on March 2nd, 2006
By Todd Zeigler in Blogs, Research, Search, Technology, Tools

I was vaguely interested in how much online buzz was being generated about Microsoft’s Origami Project, so I spent a few minutes on IceRocket.com using their blog trends tool. Here’s what the trend line for mentions of the word “origami” looks like over the last month:

Ice Rocket

The chart tells me what I already knew - that bloggers are talking about the Origami Project. Tools like Icerocket’s blog trends graph interest me, but ultimately the insights these tools provide are superficial and anecdotal.

Say I was charged with tracking blog coverage for a company like DuPont (which is not a client of ours). I might see a spike in mentions on blogs when DuPont releases an earnings report. But I might also see a spike when DuPont’s Nascar team runs well. Or when someone with the last name “DuPont” posts some gossip about Lindsay Lohan. Or when someone uses the word DuPont as an example in a post about blog tracking.

Tracking the volume of conversation alone isn’t sufficient. You’ve got to understand the context of the conversation. You’ve got to block out the background noise and find the two nuggets that might be posted on a given day that truly impact your company/organization.

Clarification: Mark Cuban, the owner of Icerocket, wrote in to point out that I could exclude Nascar results by typing in the phrase “dupont -nascar”.

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Comments

  1. mark cuban

    thx for the icerocket.com mention

    you can use delmiters. So dupont -nascar works

  2. ashah

    Mark,

    You’re absolutely right. I actually read your help section and tried “dupont - nascar” and got screwy results. I see now that “dupont -nascar” works. My bad. I’ll clarify my post.

    Note that I really like Ice Rocket. Showing the number of links each blog posts gets is extremely useful. Its also lightening fast and produces better straight search results than competitors such as Technorati. Looking foward to seeing what you guys have in store.

    Thanks,

    Todd

  3. Rita Desai

    On a related note….Dustin Hubbard, Group Manager on the Mobile PC team, talks about the execution of the Origami project buzz campaign with his version of the timelines and everything. Got the link from Scoble’s blog.

about this blog

The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research and analysis on the web-based communications industry. TBR content is posted, created and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.

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