Thursday, May 3, 2007

MediaSense Blog Measurement Tool Debuts

Umbria and PR Newswire have partnered on the launch of MediaSense Blog Measurement, for use by clients seeking insight into the buzz around their brands on the Internet.

The subscription-based MediaSense Blog Measurement service will delve into the sometimes murky and always widespread conversations of the world of blogs and other consumer-generated media. Clients will be able to find out what people have to say about their brands.

The aphorism about knowledge equaling power has become more of a truism in the 21st Century. Problems arise when trying to sift the more useful knowledge about people discussing brands from the many disparate conversations taking place online.

Specialized services have evolved to focus on intelligence gathering from blogs, and
Umbria has been among them. Their technology will be at the core of PR Newswire's MediaSense Blog Measurement service.

PR Newswire said the Blog Measurement service will be available separate from or bundled with their MediaSense product. More details arrived from them in a statement about the deal:

Reports are delivered monthly and contain an evaluation of media coverage based upon several measures including volume of coverage, coverage by media type, tonality (positive, negative, neutral), the presence of key corporate messages within articles, the overall quality of coverage based upon an article’s length, placement, publication type and tone, and the equivalent ad value.

Metrics are evaluated based upon comparison to a company’s key competitors, while also offering an unbiased assessment of how a company is portrayed in the press.

PR Newswire has promised it can deliver demographic profiles of the conversations taking place about a topic, as they show how a given message may be resonating with the audience. Instead of focusing on what articles are written about a company’s news, as in the past, the service follows the conversations.

Used competently, the service can allow a company to quickly act upon critical discussions before they can explode into a full-blown PR nightmare. Conversely, companies can see what is generating the most positive buzz about their operations, and capitalize on that.

Source:
www.webpronews.com

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