White Noise

Published 27 November 2011

About four years ago, CoreData and the good people at Google were working on the idea that the behaviour, comments, and ideas circulating the internet were a pretty interesting proxy of what was happening in the world and how people were feeling.

The theory was pretty clear – if we could produce a way to grind up and analyse all the internet chatter, on things like Facebook, MySpace, Bebo, and Twitter, then we would have a great proxy for what people are thinking.

Google liked this idea and we played with it for a bit, we built skimmers and scanners and started to suck in data about what people were saying.

But it turns out, what people are saying isn’t that interesting, what matters is what they are doing.

Let me give you an example; during the time that Qantas was shut, the Twitter comments went ballistic (see below).

According to the feed – Qantas was a vile company that you would never fly with again and the brand was irreparably damaged.

The purist version of what a company is worth and what it’s being affected by is its share price, which at the time of the PR crisis climbed steadily as you can see below.

The people who were making decisions about what the grounding meant to the business were unfazed.

This was the strength of Google’s argument – what people talk about on Twitter and Facebook isn’t real – it’s just noise – and that trying to divide intent, direction and information from noise are effectively not time well spent.

They claim – and we happen to think they are right – that what people say on Twitter isn’t that important, it’s what they do which is more interesting.

With that in mind, if you want to see what the buying intentions of a country are, you can simply use Google trend data to see what they are searching for.

Below is the searching volume in Australia for Rolex. It’s an interesting chart because it shows that each year in November and December, a time of great gift giving, the interest in Rolex spikes.

During the pre-GFC years, there was strong demand at Christmas and even the little spikes for the American and Australian bonus windows, but all that now seems to have evaporated.

If you were someone who predicts the future of a stock price by looking at the chart trends – this would tend to indicate that the future for Rolex this Christmas isn’t bright.

Rolex Search Volume Chart

It turns out that what happens on Twitter isn’t half as useful as understanding what people are actually doing.

Inigo Rudio