PeekAnalytics Social Audience Reports Featured on Forbes.com

Forbes Logo

Following up on some of the recent press we have been getting with our new PeekAnalytics Social Audience Measurement tool, today we were featured on Forbes.com. Haydn Shaughnessy of Forbes.com wrote an insightful piece on PeekAnalytics titled “Who Are The Top 10 Influencers in Social Media.” Amazingly for us, the article is ranked #1 in most popular articles for the day with a prominent feature right on the front page. Very exciting!
 

Forbes.com PeekAnalytics

If you would like to get a beta invite to the PeekAnalytics Social Audience Measurement tool, head over to analytics.peekyou.com and sign up or DM us on Twitter at @peekyou.

PeekAnalytics: Comparing the GOP Candidates’ Social Audiences

An Introduction to PeekAnalytics

The PeekAnalytics Social Audience Report was devised as a way for businesses and individuals to better utilize social media through more thoroughly understanding of whom exactly their social audience is comprised. PeekAnalytics collects data from over 60 social sites (using PeekYou’s own API) and millions of blogs, from all over the public web. Then by standardizing and analyzing this vast and disparate information, PeekAnalytics is able to map the digital footprints of an individual’s fans and followers, and provide actionable, data-driven insights. For users and platforms seeking to integrate individual level understanding and meaningful audience measurement, PeekAnalytics is the perfect tool.

The Social Audience Report

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

To best illustrate the effectiveness and accuracy of the findings, we’ve decided to profile the most prominent of the GOP’s current crop of presidential hopefuls. These candidates have not been chosen so that we might comment on the viability of any of them as candidates. As this is a body of individuals who each find himself or herself with a relatively robust (to varying degrees) Twitter followership, using them enables us to show what the tool set offers.

Key Metrics

The top section of the Social Audience Report provides PeekAnalytics’ users with an at-a-glance overview of their fans and followers; including, what portion of their social audience consists of actual, verifiable individuals (Consumer Ratio), and to what degree those individuals are connected to, and wield influence within the greater social media sphere (Social Pull).

(Note: For the moment, these top-line metrics are addressing Twitter followers.)

Total Audience

The first thing established, right off the bat, is the overall size of the social audience in question. In this case, these are the raw Twitter follower totals for each of the GOP’s top presidential candidates.

Newt Gingrich: 1,370,386
Herman Cain: 168,171
Mitt Romney: 164,416
Michele Bachmann: 115,704
Rick Perry: 108,475
Ron Paul: 79,125

By an enormous margin, the candidate with the highest follower count is former speaker of the House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich. Far behind, former Godfather’s Pizza CEO Herman Cain and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney find themselves in a statistical dead heat. Much closer behind that pair, Texas governor Rick Perry and Minnesota congresswoman Michele Bachmann find themselves neck and neck. Veteran Texas congressman Ron Paul – generally regarded as a formidable online presence, and a notoriously capable internet fundraiser, but proving that Twitter is not his domain – comes up behind the pack.

If an individuals’ (or business’) chief concern in employing social media is begetting a perception of popularity, then a large audience number may satisfy in and of itself and no further analysis is required. But, in addition to the fact that the public (and surely the competition) is becoming more and more aware of the relative lack of purposeful information provided by simply a large follower number, it’s also no longer adequate.

The remaining top-line numbers get more granular, and provide more profound and ultimately usable insights.

Consumer Ratio

This is where the Social Audience Report really begins to reveal what makes PeekAnalytics special.

The Consumer Ratio is the ratio of verifiable, addressable users to non-verifiable. The “non” are identified in our reporting as falling under one of three broad categories: Private consumers (people with private settings, which PeekYou never indexes), businesses and other organizations (brands, corporate profiles, apps, charities, government agencies, etc.), and unidentified profiles (either not connected to a real-world identity in any way, or spam bots).

The Consumer Ratio tells PeekAnalytics’ users, in simple and straightforward numbers, what portion of their social audience consists of actual people, with verifiable online identities and footprints. Consumers, as we define them, are individuals with – to varying degrees for each, but unmistakably – a transparent online identity (name, location, age, etc.), whose online life is integrated with their offline reputation (who share career and school info, and the like), who produce public content (Tweets, status updates, comments, blog entries, etc.), and whose social media connections are also trusted and verified individuals. In the case of these reports, these ratios more accurately represent actual “voters” rather than “consumers,” but the idea remains precisely the same. This is the portion of the social audience of interest, as these are actual people who have chosen to follow a given individual (or candidate, or business, or band, or whatever), and this is the portion of the social audience with which PeekAnalytics is chiefly concerned.

The report provides two numbers for this metric, the first is the actual number of verified people represented within the follower count, and the second is of course what percentage of the overall follower count those verified individuals represent.

Newt Gingrich: 477,054 ↔ 34%
Herman Cain: 77,548 ↔ 46%
Mitt Romney: 76,002 ↔ 46%
Rick Perry: 51,402 ↔ 47%
Michele Bachmann: 50,418 ↔ 43%
Ron Paul: 34,845 ↔ 44%

In terms of the actual number of confirmed individuals represented in the above ratios, Speaker Gingrich still heavily leads the pack; even though only approximately one third of his followers are verifiable. This metric reflects a change in the make-up of Newt’s followership (despite the fact that he still has roughly 1.3 million followers, as he did earlier in the summer), as previously our reporting found his ratio somewhere close to 10%. We believe this gain is owed chiefly to two significant changes: 1) Twitter has significantly improved spam detection over the course of this year, and 2) by way of his slow but steady rise up the polling, Gingrich has been picking up confirmable consumers/voters in rather significant quantities.

In general, in terms of confirmed voters, things fall in line more or less as they do above in the overall follower counts. Cain and Romney remain paired off in more or less a tie, and not too far behind them Perry and Bachmann constitute a statistical pairing of their own. Congressman Paul, as above, comes up the rear to a relatively significant degree (although form a pure percentage standpoint he falls toward the bottom of the middle the pack).

Already, however, even if thus far the story is not a shocking one, we know a great deal more about the reach of these candidates than we ever would have by just glancing at their Twitter pages alone. That in and of itself is a story worth knowing. And, we’re just getting started.

Social Pull

With the knowledge of the actual size of an individual’s consumer audience, one is still left to ponder how influential those confirmed consumers are. We know the size of the audience of verifiable consumers, but what of their quality in terms of spreading a a message further? Who are these consumers reaching, and are these comsumers’ followers listening? Are these consumers influential? The Social Pull metric provides an even deeper, more accurate, and significant idea of who exactly is receiving a given social media message, and how far that message can potentially travel to those motivated to receive it. The metric conveys to how large an audience beyond the total number represented in the Consumer Ratio can an individual’s (or business’, or candidate’s) message spread. In short, if the Social Pull number is 10x, that means that the audience the individual in question could reach is at least ten times greater than the average person.

Rick Perry: 1082x
Newt Gingrich: 934x
Michele Bachmann: 526x
Mitt Romney: 404x
Herman Cain: 466x
Ron Paul: 184x

Suddenly things look a bit different. Governor Perry’s reach here is rather noteworthy, and significantly greater than his follower number alone would suggest, as his verifiable consumer count is comprised of a particularly influential bunch. Still, in terms of people being reached on Twitter – according to this, or any of these top line metrics – he is no match for Speaker Gingrich. With a verified consumer count already eight times that of the Texas governor, Gingrich’s roughly equivalent social pull number finds him head and shoulders, and rather dramatically, beyond Perry and all of his fellow candidates in this arena.

Deeper Metrics

The Social Audience Report allows PeekAnalytics users to view side by side comparisons between two different social media players. For this section, in order to explore some of the deeper and more detailed metrics the report provides, we’re going to compare some of the candidates paired off, side by side.

A great place to start seems to be comparing our GOP Twitter king with the gentleman still most often characterized in the mainstream media as the one most likely to get the nomination: Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

Demographic Insights

Statistically, the respective demographic make-ups of Romney’s and Gingrich’s followers are not all that radically different from one another. We’d not make it our business to speculate too much on why that is, but we do imagine that some reading this will not find this fact terribly surprising.

The most unexpected finding might be that nearly a full third of Newt’s verified consumers are female, whereas women only comprise slightly more than a quarter of Mitt’s. Their followers’ age breakdowns are much closer, with both candidates finding slightly half (55% in Newt’s case and 53% in Mitt’s) of their verified followers being age 35 or older. Mitt’s follower do, however, overall skew somewhat younger than Newt’s.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

Education & Career Insights

For a little contrast, while continuing to explore some of the deeper understandings of the people comprising the candidates’ social audiences, we’ve decided for this next insight to compare Texas’s current governor to one of the state’s best known congressmen.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

From a basic education and career standpoint, the most immediately noticeable item is that Dr. Paul has a number of Ivy League educated followers rather significantly exceeding the average; with 7% of his verified followers having graduated from one of those esteemed north eastern institutions (whereas this is the case with only 2% of Governor Perry’s). A significantly larger portion of the governor’s followers have graduated from community college, with 16% of his followers fitting that description, as opposed to 6% of the congressman’s.

Otherwise, the career and education backgrounds of their verified followers seem quite similar.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

Income Level

In addition to professions, the Career Insights section of the report provides an income breakdown of the consumer audience. With 31% of his audience earning $100k or more annually, Mitt Romney finds himself with the most prosperous followers of this group of candidates (percentage-wise). Ron Paul’s audience contains the smallest portion of top earners, with only 22% of his followers in the $100K+ bracket.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

Social Insights

This final group of insights we’ll touch upon in this entry are those which specifically and explicitly dig into the online lives and behaviors of the report’s verified consumers. For this section, we’re going to do a comparison of Congresswoman Bachmann, who was briefly a buzzed about frontrunner this summer (but whose recent poll numbers are rather humble), with Herman Cain, who is still for the moment polling as one of the current frontrunners.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

The first metric in this group is one bound to be of interest to many, as it shows the average size of the consumer audience’s own potential reach. In this case, Michele Bachmann’s fans/followers have an average potential reach of 3,191 people; nearly twice that of Herman Cain’s followers, who have a potential reach of 1,686 people. Both numbers fall short of the average.

In terms of network size, 84% of Herman Cain’s consumer audience has under 500 followers, whereas the same is true of 75% of Bachmann’s.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

The remainder of the social insights – which measure both to what other social networking sites the consumer audience belongs, and in what online activities they participate – find both Bachmann’s and Cain’s audiences behaving very similarly, falling below the average in most categories.

Consumer Ratio Graphic

click image to enlarge

We’ll leave this at this for now. But these are not by any means all of the insights the PeekAnalytics Social Audience Report provides. In the coming weeks we’ll be running additional pieces exploring the tool’s many and varied capabilities.

PeekAnalytics Featured at AdAge.com

PeekAnalytics Featured On AdvertisingAge

As mentioned below, B.L. Ochman has written a deeply flattering piece about PeekYou’s brand new (currently in beta, and very soon to be launched) PeekAnalytics product. The piece has now been featured on AdAge.com. In it, Ms. Ochman details what types of insights PeekAnalytics provides, and why and how these insights are incredibly valuable for those seeking to get the most out of their engagement with social media.

“PeekYou’s beta of PeekAnalytics Social Audience Report comes closer than any of the more than 50 social media monitoring platforms and tools I’ve tested to providing, and explaining, meaningful audience analysis of Twitter followers that brands can confidently use to create their budgets,” Ochman writes.

Our CEO, Michael Hussey, and Josh Mackey, our General Manager of Product, were both interviewed for the piece as well. You can head on over to Ad Age and check it out for yourself by clicking here.

What’s Next? Blog Reviews PeekAnalytics

B.L. Ochman at the terrific What’s Next? Blog has written a wonderful piece about our brand new (currently in beta, and very soon to be launched) PeekAnalytics product. In the piece, she goes into some detail regarding what types of insights PeekAnalytics provides, and why and how they’re incredibly valuable for those seeking to get the most out of social media.

“PeekYou’s beta of PeekAnalytics Social Audience Report comes closer than any of the more than 50 social media monitoring platforms and tools I’ve tested to providing, and explaining, meaningful audience analysis of Twitter followers that brands can confidently use to create their budgets,” Ochman writes.

Michael Hussey, our CEO, and Josh Mackey, our General Manager of Product were both interviewed for the piece as well. You can head on over to What’s Next? Blog and check it out here.

UPDATE: AdAge has re-printed BL’s article. You can take a look at it here.

PeekYou to be Co-Sponsoring and Attending the 2011 Pivot Conference

PeekYou is happy to announce that we are one of the sponsors of the 2011 Pivot Conference, taking place October 17th and 18th here in New York City. Our CEO Michael Hussey, GM of Product Josh Mackey, General Manager Raj Ajrawat, and CFO Tom Lynch will also be in attendance and exhibiting at the event.

Michael has said of the conference and our involvement, “PeekYou is really excited to be a part of Pivot. It says a lot of social media’s rapid maturation, and rise in prominence and influence, that a conference of this nature is simply, pretty much a necessity.” He then added, “we look forward to meeting people from throughout the industry and discussing the utterly transformed public and social web landscape in which we’re all now working.”

If you’re interested in attending the event, just click through on the image below, or click here, and you will be taken to the registration form. We hope to see you there.


Pivot Conference


PeekAnalytics Follower Report Media Roundup

We here at PeekYou have had a hectic couple of days, abundant in opportunities to share with the world some of the capabilities of our very soon-to-be-launched PeekAnalytics service (click through to sign up for our beta and to get notified when we are launching).

You can catch up on what we’ve taken to calling “Follower Gate” here, and learn a bit more about PeekAnalytics here.

Anyway, the upshot of all this activity has been a nice amount of national coverage for PeekYou, with numerous quotes from our CEO Michael Hussey, and our GM of Product Josh Mackey to be found throughout.

Here is a roundup of all the Follower Gate articles to mention PeekYou, so far:

Gawker

Gawker (update)

MSNBC

Time Magazine

Washington Post

CBS News

ABC News

Rolling Stone

The Daily Beast

Mashable

International Business Times

Washington Examiner

Daily Caller

Global Post

We will be posting more stories as we see them come through, and we hope to advance the discussion as best we can. Remember, while the media may be playing the role of stating that 92% of Newt Gingrich’s followers are fake, we take the stance that we have been able to identify 8% of his followers as individuals who are publicly identifiable with a robust digital footprint across the public web. There is a profound difference in approaching this subject through the lens of focusing on publicly identifiable individuals, as we have done, and the benefits of doing so will be made evident with our new PeekAnalytics product. We’ve maintained that the other 92% may contain spam/bots, but may also contain individuals who choose to remain anonymous (i.e. not using a real name on Twitter), individuals who are completely private, and businesses who tweet from a business account.

- The PeekYou.com Team

Sneak “Peek”: PeekAnalytics Follower Report Product (Screenshot)

Today has been a huge day for the entire PeekAnalytics team ahead of our Follower Report product launch (sign up here to be included in updates ahead of our launch in a few weeks). We are simply stunned by the amount of response and coverage that we are getting with the Follower Report product, and are extremely excited to launch the product! As such, we thought we would send out a screenshot for the soon-to-be-launched PeekAnalytics Follower Report product. Take a look below:

PeekYou PeekAnalytics Follower Report Dashboard Screenshot

About PeekAnalytics
Peek Analytics delivers enterprise-class Social Audience Measurement solutions that provide rich consumer insights to marketers. Its powerful yet simple audience metrics lets users understand the makeup of their social consumer base and track gains for specific target segments.

Stay tuned for some more exciting updates and screenshots as we get closer to our launch!

Cheers,
The PeekAnalytics Team

Follower Gate: PeekYou Analysis Supports ex-Gingrich Staffer Claims of Twitter Follower Fraud

Newt Gingrich Twitter Followers

While claims surrounding the credibility of Newt Gingrich’s online followers are beginning to make noise in Washington and beyond, the team at PeekYou, a New York based search company, identified the large gap between perception and reality last week during a testing session for its soon-to-launch PeekAnalytics. The discovery was made while compiling a ‘Followers Report’ on all of the GOP 2012 candidates.

The Consumer Ratio measures the percentage of a Twitter audience that is identified as a “consumer” or “voter” in Newt’s case, vs business, private/anonymous and spam accounts. The average range sits anywhere between 30-60% human depending on this type of account. Newt’s was 8% — the lowest the team had ever seen by 5%.

“We have seen some pretty low ‘Consumer Ratios’ in our testing, but Newt Gingrich’s was the lowest we had ever seen. At first, we actually thought it might have been a bug on our side, but a quick manual look at the data showed our analysis was true,” said Michael Hussey, CEO and founder of PeekYou.

“Once the news broke yesterday the team went back to look at the report. The data supported that out of Newt’s 1.3 million followers only 8 percent (2 percent less than claimed in recent media reports), are identified by our algorithm as humans, meaning Newt’s follower count is really closer to 106,055,” continued Hussey.

When assessing those approximately 100,000 followers via PeekAnalytics, the company established that 67% are male, 41% are over 35 years old, and 61% have less than 100 online connections. Using normalized population data, the top 5 states for legitimate followers are Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Wisconsin. In addition, more than the majority write a blog (typically supporting press/blogger interest) and favor Facebook as their social network of choice.

PeekAnalytics Follower Reports
So what is a ‘Follower Report’? For brands, politicians, anyone (anyone, really) it’s a way to understand ones current audience on Twitter and track gains in your consumer ratio, consumer reach or target market.

PeekYou identifies the “consumer” or in Newt’s case “voters” by using algorithms that PeekYou has developed over the past five years. “It’s determined by over 20 factors including name, location, social graph, social memberships, social network, social activity and produced public content. The issue is separating out the spam bots and anonymous accounts which can look a lot like each other; so its hard for everyone, including Twitter, to weed out the fake accounts,” said Josh Mackey, GM of Product.

PeekAnalytics is currently creating a case study on the effectiveness or ROI on various follower acquisition strategies and plans to release the results shortly.

About PeekAnalytics
Peek Analytics delivers enterprise-class Social Audience Measurement solutions that provide rich consumer insights to marketers. Its powerful yet simple audience metrics lets users understand the makeup of their social consumer base and track gains for specific target segments.

About Follower Report
The Follower Report product is part of the soon to be launched PeekAnalytics tool set that uses PeekYou’s proprietary search technology to analyze each and every followers’ public digital footprints. It then aggregates and anonymizes the data to return a complete cross platform view of the Audience.

About PeekYou
PeekYou is a search company that is indexing the public web around people’s identities, and redefining what it means to look someone up online. Rather than matching together mutually relevant URLs and keywords, as Google does, PeekYou matches any given URL to the identity of the person who created it, or whom it is about. To date, PeekYou has identified over 250 million people as the authors of over 3 billion public URLs. Over 7 million unique visitors use PeekYou’s people search engine every month. As of August 1, 2011, http://www.peekyou.com was ranked the 292nd most popular website in the U.S., according to Quantcast.