Matthew Miller
Apr 24, 2012

Measuring Twitter activity around Hong Kong's Rugby 7s

HONG KONG - Twitter buzz surrounding the recent Rugby 7s event in Hong Kong reached an audience that could have filled the local stadium 31 times over and generated significant impact for key sponsors, according to PR firm Waggener Edstrom.

Measuring Twitter activity around Hong Kong's Rugby 7s

Waggener Edstrom released metrics it gathered on the event, which took place 23-25 March, as a demonstration of its proprietary tool called WE twendz pro. Team USA, England, Canada, Kenya and Spain garnered the most attention across the Twitterverse, while many fans also talked about players such as Peter Tiberio, Michaela Staniford and Alice Richardson.

Meanwhile, sponsors HSBC and Cathay Pacific managed to leverage their association with the event and create buzz and influence despite there being 15 supporting brands in total. In the following table showing share of conversation on Twitter in the days leading up to the event, a spike for HSBC and other sponsors are clearly visible. 

  Brand Percentage Date Brand Percentage
8-18 March HSBC 68 19-28 March HSBC 95
Cathay Pacific 32 Cathay Pacific 4
Carlsberg, EMC, Telstra 1

Waggener Edstrom is bullish about research and analysis, and keen to connect communication activities with measurable outcomes, Nathan Misner, senior vice president and Asia-Pacific digital lead, told Campaign Asia-Pacific. But the company saw a lack of tools for performing such measurements. While plenty of tools exist for counting web traffic, none connected traffic to influence or the way stories travel, he said.

A team tasked with filling that gap developed WE twendz pro, which studies the use of key, client-defined terms. "A lot of tools do that, but we've added an influence lens or filter to it, which looks not only at the number of followers or retweets, but also total reach, exposure, and resonance," Misner said. The tool also has built-in sentiment analysis, which encodes the traffic as positive, negative, or neutral.

Specifically, the tool delivers measurements of:

  • Velocity: The hourly rate of relevant tweets
  • Resonance: The ratio of positive to negative tweets
  • Exposure: The average number of followers and tweets per hour
  • Engagement: A weighted ratio of replies, retweets, questions, links, and hashtags.

"It's how we listen for brands and determine which communication opportunities should be prioritized," Misner said.

After a major news announcement, for example, the company will use the tool to monitor conversations. "For most clients, we know who the main bloggers and social influencers are," Misner said. "But when things get hairy around a crisis, we want to see velocity, and which second-level influencers are effecting the conversation. That way, if there is something incorrect in a story or tweet, or if there is context that might help that influencer's understanding, we can provide additional information."

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

21 hours ago

Creative Minds: FCB's Claire Herselman transforms ...

Get to know the senior copywriter who moved to London at 18 and worked as a barista.

22 hours ago

WPP boss Mark Read hits back at employee vitriol ...

CEO told Campaign's sister title, PRWeek, that some of the comments being made about his decision to require all employees to work in the office at least four days a week do not reflect the views of many staff.

23 hours ago

How young Malay-Muslim women are spending and consuming

Malay-Muslim women are leading a consumer revolution, with 93% preferring local groceries and 89% choosing homegrown F&B, according to a new analysis. Brand boycotts are reshaping loyalty, while halal certification, affordability, and shared cultural identity are the decisive factors in their purchasing power.

1 day ago

Singtel's attempt to reimagine LNY traditions ...

The telco's annual festive film blends humour and lightheartedness, but its reliance on traditional gender roles dampens an otherwise innovative take on festive preparations.