Will vertical social media monitoring catch on?(3)

By Erica Swallow  2011-7-14 10:36:33

Social media campaign edit page

Like other social media monitoring tools, Cruvee enables users to set up campaigns specific to current promotions or marketing initiatives. However, it does so with the language of wine in mind.

"Since Cruvee's social media monitoring system was built with wine in mind, it already has the ability baked in to apply filtering and context validation of conversations that are either impossible or very difficult to employ in general purpose tool sets," says Mabray. "The user merely has to dial up or down the necessary 'wine context' needed for each keyword in their campaign."

Monitoring conversations

After a social media campaign is active, the user can access a feed of conversations related to a given campaign. Cruvee recently added a feature that shows the Klout score for the commenter, so that wine brands using Cruvee can see a general measure of the user's influence.

Facebook application

Cruvee's API syndicates a wine brand's winery and wine details to its Facebook app, which enables wine brands to publish those details to their Facebook Pages, including Buy Now buttons that lead to their e-commerce sites. More than 900 wineries—about 50 percent of Cruvee users—use the free Facebook app. Here's an example of Jordan Vineyard & Winery's use of the app.

"Besides being syndicated to all of our partners, the information in Cruvee can also be used by the wineries themselves to satisfy one-off requests from critics, writers and bloggers (Cruvee Directory), as well as integrating into their own initiatives or even powering their own website or trade portal," explained Mabray. "We are also seeing companies begin to bootstrap applications on top of Cruvee's data, rapidly accelerating product development and innovation in our industry—case in point is the restaurant menu iPad app called Tastevin."

Is this the beginning of a vertical social media monitoring trend?

Cruvee is the first vertical social media monitoring tool we've seen, and it is being widely adopted in the wine industry, with nearly 30 percent of American wineries using it, as reported by VinTank. With Cruvee's growth, we wonder why other industry-specific social media monitoring tools haven't made their way to the stage.

After all, most industries operate on jargon. In the automobile industry, for example, social media monitors running solely on keyword searches—rather than industry-specific algorithms—would likely have a difficult time parsing whether the sentiment behind a post mentioning "sick rims" was positive or negative, or that it wasn't talking about glasses or BlackBerry-creator RIM, for example.

Mashable spoke with Altimeter Group Industry Analyst Susan Etlinger, who focuses on social and mobile analytics, to hear her thoughts on whether this is a trend we'll see blossoming in coming years. In short, Etlinger says:

"I am not convinced that this is the beginning of vertical social media monitoring. I think it does raise the bar for the monitoring tools out there to improve their domain expertise. Furthermore, I think domain expertise will become an even bigger differentiator than it is now. Building industry-appropriate lexicons is going to become critical in the next year, because the only way to truly understand a conversation about a particular product or industry is to understand the environment, the relationship between the customer and the business."

Etlinger says that social media conversations are akin to detective work: "Every post in social media is a clue to something—it's a clue about the relationship between that person and the business he or she is discussing. If you don't understand the context of the conversation, then you are very vulnerable to drawing the wrong conclusions."

We'd like to open this conversation up for discussion. Readers, do you think that Cruvee is leading the way towards a vertical social media monitoring trend? Have you seen other industry-specific social media monitoring tools on the market? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

[1] [2] [3]


From www.openforum.com
  • YourName:
  • More
  • Say:


  • Code:

© 2008 cnwinenews.com Inc. All Rights Reserved.

About us