Global Connections

Outbreaks of sentimentitis – riding the social media tiger

  • Posted by: Nav Dhami

  • Posted in: Global Connections
  • When: 01.12.2011 at 11:00 AM
  • Viewed: 432

It was deja vu all over again when the Twitterati presented Qantas with a public relations challenge earlier this month. The unexpected negative response on Twitter following the launch of an online competition was just one among several similar social media PR predicaments this year for brands, including Southwest Airlines, Kenneth Cole and Vodafone. As a friend - a Joseph Heller fan - who works in PR said recently, it’s enough to make you long wistfully for slapping a variant of Colonel Korn’s Catch-22 rule on Twitter: the only people permitted to tweet are those who never do.
 
To me, these social media developments brought to mind observations made in the pre-Social Media dark ages by a certain American Postman. 

What the Postman Said

Educator and media theorist Neil Postman came up with an interesting term in 1985 to describe the relationship between information consumed and any resultant action: the Information-Action Ratio. Information in our age, said Postman, “comes indiscriminately, directed at no one in particular, disconnected from usefulness; we are glutted with information, drowning in information, have no control over it, don't know what to do with it.' Pretty good comment, made circa 1990, by someone with an Old Media last name.

Over the past 5 years or so, with the online Social Media explosion, Postman’s Ratio has gone completely askew, weighed down by the deluge of “information” washing across the online world every minute of every day. To paraphrase what I wrote two years ago, people have always been active with their responses, views and opinions, but they just never had the right tools to reveal their own thoughts and take their conversations to the wider world easily and simply. Now they do, with Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and a myriad of others. While the sheer volume of social media talk has unhinged traditional media types (or, as Norg Media CEO Bronwen Clune described them in 2009 at Media 140, ‘the audience formerly known as the media’) it has also overturned many public relations certainties for organisations of all hues.

The challenge facing organisations who are keenly aware that they need to do something about this revolution has sparked an innovative social media enterprise: expert services and tools to monitor and ‘filter out’ the noise for you, leaving only that which is most relevant to you.

But, for the Web, ‘relevance’ is a broad term (the Oxford English Dictionary defines it as “Computing. The property of fulfilling the requirements of a user's search for information; the degree to which a document, web page, etc., fulfils such requirements”). Especially in the light of Postman’s Information-Action Ratio, this definition encompasses material of potential interest in addition to rarer information of pressing urgency. Within the ambit of media information that is ‘relevant’, what is singularly important is social media material with a potentially high Information-Action Ratio. The most imperative of all such media information is that which causes organisations to quickly roll out the PR heavy artillery for prompt reputation management: chain reactions of unpredictable user-generated negativity that erupt online. Because of its potential to cripple organisations’ cachet, it greatly helps to be forearmed to deal rapidly with such an eventuality - and to act promptly and effectively.

As the examples given early in this post show, when the negativity contagion gets out of hand, a single misstep can turn into a stumble in the social media minefield, causing reputations to fall apart. And bad news travels fast.
 


A bad case of Sentimentitis

What is it about negative sentiments that causes them to go ‘viral’, to use particularly apt social media-speak in this case?

First, it would do good to take a look at what the boffins have to say about why social media is so popular in the first place.

In 2009, just when Twitter was transforming from a tyro into an online phenomenon, I came across a quite interesting study by Princeton psychologist Emily Pronin and Harvard’s Daniel Wegner. The study focused on a link between situations that make you think fast and feelings of elation, power and creativity. However, the rush of positive feelings is seen only when the brisk thinking is varied; repetitive thoughts instead cause anxiety. This could partly explain the rapid growth of microblogs such as Twitter, vis-a-vis ‘slower’ social media such as blogs. ‘Tweets’ are often posted in relatively short bursts of activity, and the frenetic activity and varied content can leave microbloggers with a palpable dopamine surge.

An important ego-booster and motivator for tweeters is re-tweeting of their 140-word outpourings. Research at the Institute for Web Science and Technologies, University of Koblenz-Landau, suggests a potent recipe to increase the chances of your tweet being re-tweeted: a dash of negative emoticons, such as :-(, and generous helpings of exciting or intense sentiment, including annoying or unpleasant words. That old adage, ‘bad news travels fast’, holds very true for online social media as well - only, the velocity of this spread gets ramped up a geometric scale because of the massive connectivity that the medium provides!

And then, compounding the virulence, there’s the action-emotion link: the action of tweeting anti someone perceived as more powerful can itself cause feelings of emotional satisfaction (that dopamine surge again), thus feeding on itself and driving the social media user to tweet some more! And the language used by other tweeters on that topic, if it is trending and is emotionally provocative, will cause further ‘emotional action tendencies’.

The curious work of ‘rock star’ experimental philosopher Josh Knobe at Stanford University hints at an interesting insight that has relevance to our discussion. Knobe’s work suggests that situations that present enough detail for people to be able to make an ethical judgment are more likely to provoke a stronger negative response if they trigger cynicism, while any positive response in the absence - or paucity - of information inviting cynicism would be much more subdued. While tweetlengths do not lend themselves to much detail individually, it’s when tweeters begin to converge on a topic and start it trending that potentially damaging details (about the target of the ‘conversation’) can start to be shared at a furious pace, inciting further negative responses that lift up the Information-Action Ratio from the social media users’ perspective. This dramatically increases the chances that they will act in some way - mostly individually and online, but sometimes collectively and in the real world.

Ask a certain Hosni Mubarak about the potential consequences when the latter happens.

Conclusion

The conclusion from the above discussion almost goes without saying. Keep your ear to the ground and your antennae out for social media content with potentially ‘virulent’ negative sentiment, which has a potentially high Information-Action Ratio (from the users’ perspective). Act quickly but judiciously to quell the negativity when you sense the first hint of an outbreak.

Nav Dhami

Business Analyst, Project Management Office

Nav Dhami is a Business Analyst at Media Monitors. A former media and IT services entrepreneur, Nav is an MBA candidate at the Macquarie Graduate School of Management.

Comments

tall on 06.01.12 at 11.00AM

Nav - your article is right on! Virtually perfect in summing up the emotional, infantile beast that social media has become.
The Internet may be about the exchange of information but Social Media is alll about the exchange of sentiment. Social Media is all about the way people feel. Look at Facebook and how 99% of users post youtube music videos or funny pictures of cats and dogs or their hyperbole over Atheism versus Theism. Social Media is all very abstract and sentimental. Its about rhetoric, mood and people expressing themselves narcissisticly. They adorn and decorate their pages the music, art and quotations of successful famous geniuses as though this association endows them with some sort of micro-fame and especialness (sic) when in truth they are just generating an aura of mediocre speciousness. The large majority of Facebook pages has no original user content at all when it comes to matters of art, culture, media, literature etc. Atheist pages just post Dawkins or Hitchen quotes over & over as though copying and posting such quotes affords them the intellectual credabilty of the former genuine intellectuals.
Social Media is a form of thin fame for the common man.
Today on facebook there is a pseudo-serious, faux-indignant flurry of posts about how some latest Facebook spam scam has stolen heaps of user passwords - as though this was actually important!!!
A Facebook page, a Twitter account or a YouTube channel does not matter at all! Users are fully deluded into thinking their Social Media games are valuable when in fact social media is a corporate consumerist marketing phenomena which primarily the middle-class has been duped into. Social media passwords being stolen - how can it matter at all really!? Who actually cares except those tragic social media addicts for sake of mock-self-righteous anger and vain opining who take the bait again and again because such concern and engagement on their behalf is really only a form of entertainment for them. They are driven firstly by chronic over-watching of TV - news media for their post-modernist life move cues and entertainment media for their fashion-driven consumerism. EG - people mainly go to new year's eve fireworks because they see it on TV or the Occupy movement which is/was a result of lower middle-class types watching other Occupy protests on TV - they want to be part of the 'movie' rather than face the horror of not being rich or a celebrity - such social pathetic-ness being a result of the past two decades of dumbing down of literature, art & language. The middle-class have been and still are 'turned on' to social media by the greater TV news media. When Google bought Twitter there was a worldwide avalanche of news media stories about Twitter, mainly celebrities using Twitter and within 2 months every sheep and his dog had a Twitter account. And the unconsciously post-modernist first world masses use social media as a type of smug middle-class performance, a means of distracting themselves they are just one loser among billions. Humans hate to feel insignificant hence their belief in God/s and social media is a way for them to pretend otherwise.
Everything on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social media is so very, very minor, trivial, brief, temporal and just nano-sentimentality - an exercise in repetitive cadences by people raised to be egotistical by corporations who use fashion to sell to these consumers who buy and use motivated by their ego.
Users of social media who genuinely believe it is important and their role in it too are those who have been educated and conditioned by advertising to love society exactly the same way Winston Smith loved Big Brother. Its all about money because money is what people do actually worry about. No money - no societal engaged existence.
tall.
PS. The Internet is the Reincarnation of Kurt Cobain.

Reply

Bethany Brightmore on 03.02.12 at 02.00PM

I do think that online social media does pose a problem when it comes to bad press, especially when it is created through social media itself.

I think the problem, or arguably the advantage, of using Twitter is the platform's instantaneous nature, thus, saying 'bad news travels fast' is in many circumstances appropriate when it is news worthy. When negative sentiment is created by one individual, it can quickly multiply and then suddenly..ta da it's the latest news headline on mashable!

However, there are some people who like to create this negative sentiment by openly expressing their opinion, and Twitter is the ideal platform for creating a stir and getting a quick reaction from people with opposing views. The question still lies, is there such thing as bad publicity?

Here's a blog that has some interesting stories on tweets that have badly backfired:
http://blog.tickyes.com/you-are-what-you-tweet/

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