Social Sentiment is no longer the ugly step child of social metrics, overlooked or ignored. No longer relegated to just measuring content performance. It’s being used as a litmus test for investors.
So what is all this fuss about sentiment anyway? In a nutshell, Social Sentiment refers to the overall perception that the online community has on a brand or topic, whether they adore your brand or are sharpening their virtual pitchforks and baying for blood. At its most basic, it calculates the number of negative posts vs the positive. Very much like a kid plucking petals in “love me / love me not” way.
Uber has seen its fair share of news coverage and social conversations this year. The ride hailing app is a prime example of how social sentiment can shift consumers’ attitudes towards a company faster than the short-lived career of an internet star. And this negative shift in sentiment can drastically affect a company’s bottom line.
Calls on social media for a boycott of Uber and calls for the deletion of the app started in January, following Uber drivers still operating after the US Taxi Alliance called a protest following Trump’s Muslim Ban. The trending #DeleteUber hashtag saw 200 000 Uber accounts deleted over a single weekend.
The company continued to draw the ire of social media as scandal after scandal showed up in the news on social time lines globally. Facing mounting pressure from investors, concerned for the company’s reputation, Travis Kalanick resigned as CEO in June. There is no guarantee that this will be enough to right the sinking sentiment ship and steer it toward more positive waters, but had board members not paid heed to the tsunami of negative sentiment and acted, countless more accounts could have been deleted.
There is no guarantee that this will be enough to right the sinking sentiment ship and steer it toward more positive waters, but had board members not paid heed to the tsunami of negative sentiment and acted, countless more accounts could have been deleted.
Social Listening extends a little further than just what consumers think of your brand. It’s a vital window into reality, giving brands a glimpse into topics and issues relevant to their audience. Neglecting this could lead to an OUTpouring of negativity that would make your dad cringe.
Using Social Listening effectively and leveraging off of social conversations can shift sentiment towards a brand. Tapping into conversations and successfully adding value to its audience, gives the impression that a brand truly understands their audience and consumer base. With content shock (slowly strangling the slightly more traditional model of content marketing), brands that are successfully able to attract and maintain an audience’s attention through smart social strategies borne out of social listening will be the ones that morph audiences into cash-spending consumers.
With the Attention Economy becoming tighter than a spandex suite on an elephant, being relevant and personable to your audience will not only ensure that your content is seen but that it influences consumers’ behaviour. Ignoring Social Listening and Sentiment will not only see your brand become the fodder for internet memes, but it will cut deeply into your profits.