Search Patterns
Blogging 101 : How to build another kind of influence through "search"
Look at the bottom of this screen shot and tell me what you see.
I had to go into my stats to find out who was directing so much attention to my first thoughts about Google's G1. Believe it or not it's purely search traffic.
Google Search works in mysterious ways. I honestly think it's hilarious that neither Gizmodo nor Endgaget are above culturekitchen in the search for google+g1+phone. Am actually #1 in the blog search.
Search Engines | Search Patterns | Search strings | Google
Online tools for predicting Super-Tuesday winners
Joshua Levy had to say this last time around about search patterns and elections :
Amidst all of the head-scratching — or self-flagellating, as I like to call it — following pollsters’ erroneous predictions in New Hampshire is a sign that the web may have had it right all along.
Yahoo! has released some Buzz data that shows that Hillary Clinton’s “Buzz Score†— “the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read†— went up and up in the runup to the New Hampshire primary. At the same time, Barack Obama’s score spiked downward.
In addition, the fine folks at Yahoo! report that on the day of the New Hampshire primary Clinton’s Buzz Score among New Hampshire women spiked on primary day. (It’s scary that they know this information so precisely).
Obama originally led in searches among voters age 45 and older, but by primary day Clinton had a 15% lead over Obama.
If Yahoo's Election08 Political Dashboard is any indication, as of 8:28am EST, the winners will be :
- Barack Obama : His buzz track has gone up 14.2% for a 67% of all political searches.
- John McCain : By a razor thin margin given his searches have declined almost 20% while Romney's are up almost 8%.
Oddsmaking | Online Behavior | Politics | Search Patterns | 2008 Presidential Elections | BoDog | Primaries | Yahoo! Political Dashboard
























