More on Comcast and Tweets April 9, 2008

Posted by J.W. Crump in ImpactWatch, ImpactWatch Features, Monitoring, Other, Research, Twitter

[This post is cross-posted at the ImpactWatch Blog

To follow up on a recent post concerning Comcast’s effort to answer consumer complaints via Twitter, I used Tweet Scan to search specifically for Comcast posts and research exactly with what we are dealing. A basic one-word search found well over 1000 tweets about Comcast within just the last couple of hours, so I narrowed my focus down to the most recent 300. I read each of them, and categorized them in three different ways.

The first specification was whether the tweet was positive, negative, or neutral, overall. The results are as follows: 26 of the tweets were positive, 86 were neutral, and a majority of 188 were negative. It is a pretty negative environment for Comcast on Twitter right now.

positive1.jpg

The second category dealt with what category of complaint or praise under which the tweet fell. There were four distinctions: Not Working, Slow, Prices, and Company. “Not Working” and “Slow” deal with complaints about the Internet and cable service. “Prices” concern any complaints or praise about cost or billing issues. “Company” refers to any mention of the company that does not fall into one of those categories, or short tweets with little information (i.e. “grrr…Comcast”). 178 were about the company itself, 66 were problems with the Internet or cable completely not working, 33 were about slowdown, and 22 were about pricing concerns. It is interesting that on Twitter there is a lot of general venting about Comcast (bad for the brand), and less specific complaints.

tpics1.jpg

The final category is whether or not the tweet contains cursing of any sort. From a quick skim of the 300 tweets, it seems like this is a good indicator of the level of frustration by the writer of the tweet. 35 contained curse words, and 265 did not.

curses.jpg

Found below are some examples of Comcast-related tweets, as well as a document containing all the graphs above. This post is similar to the kind of analysis we perform through out service ImpactWatch. Interesting to note is that several of the tweets among the 300 were by the same user, who claims to be a representative from Comcast. Also, many of the tweets contained links to articles referencing the recent customer service use of Twitter by Comcast. Unfortunately, the representative could only handle one consumer problem at a time, so the use of tweets was just as effective as phone consumer services. The links below represent the tweet-by-tweet written data, some examples of Comcast-related tweets, and analytics.

All Data Collected

Example Tweets

Graphs Made in IW

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Trackbacks/Pings

  1. +1 Vote -1 Vote +1Ist Twitter ein Negativ-Medium? - Crossmediale Kommunikation - April 9th, 2008 at 12:31 pm

  2. Vote -1 Vote +1The Beta Stage » Blog Archive » Comcast: Opening Up A Can Of Worms? - April 9th, 2008 at 2:18 pm

  3. Vote -1 Vote +1bootstrap | economist :: Customer Service in the Information Age - April 19th, 2008 at 2:24 pm

Comments

  1. Vote -1 Vote +1Robb Topolski - April 9th, 2008 at 10:53 am

    Comcast is somewhat of a utility, like water or electricity. You don’t really compliment it when the service is working correctly.

  2. Vote -1 Vote +1Todd Zeigler - April 9th, 2008 at 11:06 am

    Robb – true, that is why the nature of the complaints is what they can learn from here.

    The other thing I would point out is that the volume of tweets for Comcast is much, much higher than that of other utilities like Verizon.

About this blog

The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research, analysis and conversation on web-based communications and its increasingly powerful role in the economy, politics and society. TBR content is created, posted 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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