Why do TipTop's Sentiment Trend Charts rock?
Most twitter trending charts only plot the volume of tweets related to a search query over time. While these simple charts about a term's popularity over time are interesting, they don't add any insights into what people are saying, feeling or thinking about the content being tweeted on an aggregate level. This is where TipTop's sentiment-based search results shine.
- The TipTop sentiment trend charts are generated real-time and are great for short-term historic views of current topics.
- You can quickly see satisfaction levels of customers related to your company, product or service and then filter results by topics to find people's specific concerns or tweets that lay beneath TipTop's sentiment trend analysis.
- Easily ascertain attitudes and interests surrounding popular topics, people, places and events through TipTop's opinion mining analysis. Then dig deeper into people's thoughts by reading the best tweets grouped into positive Tips and negative piTs.
For a search on the movie Avatar you can see that at this time enthusiasm is waning with Tip tweets decreasing and piT tweets increasing, a popular topic is it being banned in China, and a related tip that it is a good date movie. TipTop provides tools like "Filter Tips by" to show topics, related the search query, which you can click on to read specific positive Tips or negative piTs messages. For further research, TipTop also presents the most popular Internet links (Websites, articles, photos, video, etc.) that people are posting "Top Pages on the Web" at the moment. TipTop's built-in semantic abilities are powerful, one can even see how people are thinking about the US Economy, but we don't recommend putting all your money in the stock market just yet!
We hope you enjoy using TipTop to help you quickly make discoveries and get the best answers for whatever is on your mind now.
Greg Martin & the TipTop Team
Good stuff! I'm not going back into the market until the negative sentiment for "Great Depression" comes down significantly from its current 70%.
Posted by: Abhijit Sahay | 01/11/2010 at 06:57 PM