Top Banner
Twitter metrics and measure Why (more than how to) analyse Twitter Dr Stephen Dann School of Management Marketing & International Business, Australian National University @stephendann or [email protected]
29

Twitter Users Guide 2010 Upload

May 12, 2015

Download

Business

Stephen Dann

Prior analysis of Twitter and a way forward to create something new in the space of Twitter analysis
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Twitter metrics and measureWhy (more than how to) analyse Twitter

Dr Stephen DannSchool of Management

Marketing & International Business, Australian National University

@stephendann or [email protected]

Page 2: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Twitter! (What is it good for?)

• health community (Berger 2009)• public libraries (Cahill 2009, Cuddy 2009)• political campaigns (Cetina 2009, Henneburg et al

2009)• business (Dudley 2009; Power and Forte 2008)• journalism (Ettama 2009)• civil unrest and protests (Fahmi 2009)• social activism (Galer-Unti 2009)• live coverage of events (Gay et al 2009)• eyewitness accounts (Lariscy et al 2009)• government (Macintosh 2009)• education (Parslow 2009).

Page 3: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Uses and usage

• casual listening platform – Crawford 2009

• creating the illusion of physicality– Hohl 2009

• sense of connectedness and relationship– Henneburg et al 2009

• venue for conversation– Steiner 2009

Page 4: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Why dissect a living medium?

Page 5: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Metrics

• What gets measured gets done

• What gets done can be measured

• What gets tweeted can be assembled into little diagrams with neat colour schemes

Page 6: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload
Page 7: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Why bother?

“Okay, so if we’re going to do it, can it be done well?”

“No?”“How about medium rare?”

Page 8: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Coding the Streams

Krishnamurthy et al (2008) •users were classified by

–follower/following counts,

•Numbers and ratios

–means and mechanisms of their engagement

•Web (61.7%), mobile/text (7.5%), software (22.4%)

–volume of use •Tweets per time period

http://www.thegreenhead.com/2008/09/slice-solutions-pie-pan-divider-creates-perfect-slices.php

Page 9: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Coding the Streams

Java et al 2007 1,348,543 tweets 76,177 users April 01, to May 30, 2007

Four meta-categories daily chatter conversations information / URL sharing news reporting

http://www.thegreenhead.com/2008/09/slice-solutions-pie-pan-divider-creates-perfect-slices.php

Page 10: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Analysis 2: The Quickening

Jansen et al (2009) • tweets with brand name • expression of brand sentiment

• 13-week period–April 4, 2008 to July 3, 2008.

•650 reporting episodes –13 x 50 brands

•149,472 tweets

Page 11: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Analysis 3: Oh, those guys

Pear Analytics (2009)• 2000 tweets• 11am to 5pm• 10 working days

Six part classification• news (3.6%), • spam (3.75%), • self-promotion (5.85%), • pointless babble (40.55%)• conversational (37.55%)• pass-along value (8.70%).

Page 12: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Where’s the party @?

Honeycutt and Herring (2009)• four one-hour samples • four-hour intervals• 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, on January 11, 2008

•Sample of 200 tweets coded with grounded methodology

1) Addressivity: Directs a message to another person2) Reference: Makes reference to another person, butdoes not direct a message to him or her. 3) Emoticon: Used as part of an emoticon. 4) Email: Used as part of an email address. 5) Locational 'at': Signals where an entity is located.6) Non-locational 'at': Used to represent the preposition 'at' other than in the sense of location. 7) Other: Uses not fitting into any other category,

Page 13: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Categories

Naaman, Boase and Lai (2010)• Sample of 400 tweets

–more than one category was assigned to a single message.

• Sampling frame –125,593 unique user IDs –‘personal’ Twitter users–10 friends, 10 followers, 10 messages–911 users

•N = 350 users

The Categories• Information Sharing• Self Promotion• Opinions/Complaints• Statements and Random Thoughts• Me now• Question to followers• Presence Maintenance• Anecdote (me)• Anecdote (others)

Page 14: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Tweet, Tweet, Retweet

danah boydScott GolderGilad Lotan

Microsoft!

Conversational Aspects of Retweeting on Twitter• Process of RT

–Preservation–Shrtn–Attribution / Authorship

Rationale–Amplify–Entertain–Comment–Visible listening

• Agreement• Support• AOL/me too• Self gain• Self archive

Page 15: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

The consistent theme

People keep using Twitter for personal use.

• Discussions of “self”• Pointless babble • Conversational

All criticisms of the use of twitter for pleasure and personal consumption

Page 16: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

What Twitter looks like…

…and how are people using Twitter?

Twitter – www.twitter.com

‘Sup?

Page 17: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Recoding the Platform

Let’s do it my way

Page 18: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Theory and Ideology

Useful versus Enjoyable

Bohme (2006) outlines a propensity of society to classify technology of all forms into – “useful and therefore valuable” – “enjoyable, therefore irrelevant”.

Böhme, G (2006) Technical Gadgetry: Technological Development in the Aesthetic Economy, Thesis Eleven, 86 (1): 54-66

Page 19: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Why do it?

Twitter is not about the aggregate firehose

Twitter is how you use it.

Analysis: what (twitter history) as an indicator of how (use of the service)

Page 20: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Method

Grounded Theory• Broad categories based on / supported by six prior studies•Sub categories developed from theory and data• Bunch of different boxes for sorting the letters

Personal Twitter History• @stephendann

–274 Following / –355 Followers–2841 messages –Mar 13 2007 to Aug 18 2009

• Sujathan (2009) “Twitter to pdf” software.

Page 21: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Categories and Results

Don’t actual scale to the public sphere!

Huzzah! NO MASS GENERALISATION POSSIBLE!

Page 22: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Major Categories

• Conversational– Uses an @statement to address another user

• Status– An answer to “What are you doing now?”.

• Pass along– Tweets of endorsement of content

• News– Identifiable news content which is not UGC

• Phatic– Content independent connected presence

• Spam– Junk traffic, unsolicited automated posts, and other

automated tweets generated without user consent

Page 23: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Minor CategoriesConversational1. Query2. Referral3. Action4. Response

Status1. Personal2. Temporal3. Location4. Mechanical5. Physical6. Work7. Activity

Pass along1. RT2. UGC3. Endorsement

News1. Headlines2. Sport3. Event4. Weather

Phatic1. Greeting2. Fourth wall3. Broadcast4. Unclassifiable

Spam

Page 24: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Results - @stephendann

Page 25: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Questions

Useful Twitter classification approach?

Replicable across multiple accounts?

Improvements to the heavy duty lifting?Subjective manual coding is a featureImproved data collection

Page 26: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

Questions

[email protected] Or

@stephendann

Page 27: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

ReferencesBöhme, G (2006) Technical Gadgetry: Technological Development in the Aesthetic Economy, Thesis Eleven, 86 (1): 54-

66

Cetina, K K 2009, What is a Pipe? bama and the Sociological Imagination, Theory, Culture & Society 2009 26(5): 129–140

Crawford, K (2009)'Following you: Disciplines of listening in social media',Continuum,23:4,525 — 535

Dudley, E 2009, Editorial: Lines of Communication, Journal of Librarianship and Information Science 2009; 41; 131-134

Ettama, J 2009 New media and new mechanisms of public accountability, Journalism 2009; 10; 319-321

Fahmi, W S 2009, Bloggers' street movement and the right to the city. (Re)claiming Cairo's real and virtual "spaces of freedom", Environment and Urbanization 2009; 21; 89-107

Galer-Unti, R 2009, Guerilla Advocacy: Using Aggressive Marketing Techniques for Health Policy Change, Health Promotion Practice, 10; 325-327

Gay, P Plait, P, Raddick, J, Cain, F and Lakdawalla, E (2009) "Live Casting: Bringing Astronomy to the Masses in Real Time", CAP Journal, June 26-29

Henneburg, S. Scammell, M and O'Shaughnessy, N (2009) Political marketing management and theories of democracy, Marketing Theory 2009; 9; 165-188

Honeycutt, C and Herring, S C (2009) Beyond Microblogging: Conversation and Collaboration via Twitter, (2009). Proceedings of the Forty-Second Hawai’i International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-42). Los Alamitos, CA: IEEE Press. 1-10, http://ella.slis.indiana.edu/~herring/honeycutt.herring.2009.pdf

Jansen, B, Zhang, M, Sobel, K and Chowdury, A (2009) Twitter power: Tweets as electronic word of mouth, Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 60(11):2169–2188, 2009 http://ist.psu.edu/faculty_pages/jjansen/academic/jansen_twitter_electronic_word_of_mouth.pdf

Java, A, Song, X, Finin, T and Tseng, B (2007) Why We Twitter: Understanding Microblogging Usage and Communities, Joint 9th WEBKDD and 1st SNA-KDD Workshop ’07 , August 12, 2007, p 56-65

Page 28: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

ReferencesKrishnamurthy, B, Gill, P and Arlitt, M (2008) A Few Chirps About Twitter, WOSN'08, August

18, 2008, 19-24

Lariscy, R Avery, E J, Sweetser, K and Howes, P 2009 An examination of the role of online social media in journalists’ source mix, Public Relations Review 35 (2009) 314–316

Macintosh, A 2009, The emergence of digital governance, Significance, December, 176-178

Naaman, M, Boase, J and Lai, C-H (2010) Is it Really About Me? Message Content in Social Awareness Streams, CSCW 2010, February 6–10

Parslow, G, 2009, Commentary: Twitter for Educational Networking, BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY EDUCATION Vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 255–256, 2009

Pear Analytics (2009) Twitter Study – August 2009, http://www.pearanalytics.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/Twitter-Study-August-2009.pdf

Power, R and Forte, D 2008, War & Peace in Cyberspace: Don’t twitter away your organisation’s secrets, Computer Fraud and Security, August, 18-20

Zhao, D and Rosson, M B, How and Why People Twitter: The Role that Micro-blogging Plays in Informal Communication at Work, GROUP’04, May 10–13, 2009, 243-252

Page 29: Twitter   Users Guide 2010   Upload

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.5 Australia License. To view a copy of this license, visit

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/au/