5 big data sources for strategic sentiment analysis

Somewhere, someone is tweeting “[This airline] sucks the big one!” In the past, they would have been ignored. These days many airlines respond with sympathy (“We’re so sorry you’re having a rough trip — please DM us, so we can resolve it”) or send an invitation to call an 800-number (where you can wait on hold forever).

A tool called sentiment analysis, or the mathematical categorization of statements’ negative or positive connotations, gives companies powerful ways to analyze aggregate language data across all sorts of communications, not only tweets. There’s real value in measuring sentiment inside and outside your company. Here are five of the most valuable sentiment sources to tap.

Customer inquiries

When a customer asks about your product or services, metrics on overall sentiment, the length of the message, and words used can be compared to past inquiries. Different inquiries warrant different treatment.

Customer service

When a customer writes in about a problem, is he or she really upset or simply asking, “Hi, can you look into this?” Sentiment analysis of these interactions helps track the way customers feel about your company or product over time. Is your relationship solid? When interacting with an inexperienced operator, do customers walk away satisfied?