Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Social Media Monitoring of Health Care Reform Topics


Social media dashboard for health care reform - click to enlarge
Now that it’s been a week since the health care reform bill was passed into law, it’s good timing to see how it played out in social media, where unbridled opinions spread like epidemics. Using Attensity360 social media monitoring software as a service, I built a dashboard to monitor the topic of “health care reform.”
Not surprisingly, the topic spiked on March 21 and March 22, in line with the House of Representatives’ approval of the bill on March 21. “Health care reform” was included in 210,157 posts over the last 30 days. The topic spiked from 6,504 mentions on March 20 to 33,701 mentions on March 21 and 33,991 mentions on March 22. Mentions steadily declined thereafter and settled at 5,283 at the end of the week on March 27.
Topic sentiment over the last 30 days was 34 percent positive, 31 percent negative, 29 percent neutral, and six percent mixed. Topic sentiment between March 19 and March 31 was 32 percent positive, 30 percent negative, 32 percent neutral, and six percent mixed.
The top five sources of the posts were Digg (1,402), Reddit (458), Gather (223), Amazon Politics Community (187), and Medlogs (177).  For each of the top sources, I can view reports for topic trend (how many posts per date), sentiment, daily traffic, U.S. demographics, and the top five articles this week that mention “health care reform.”
The top article for posts and comments this week from top source Digg was this Associated Press article, “Health overhaul likely to strain doctor shortage.” I can also view the comments on the article and interact directly with the authors of the comments. Here’s my comment: for those considering a medical career, now may be the time!
It’s clear from this social-media dashboard that positive, negative, and neutral opinions about health care reform are almost equal. This means that the proponents of health care reform, while winning the legislative battle, have a lot of PR to do to persuade the neutrals and the negatives to join the positive camp. Another look may reveal that the neutral articles were written by journalists, who are supposed to be neutral. TheAssociated Press article passed that test with a neutral sentiment rating.
The good news for all involved in health care reform is that, with Attensity360, they have cost-effective and instant access to the largest focus group in history: social media. Social media participation is growing just like universal health insurance, and organizations cannot ignore either of these developments.
How can social media monitoring apply in your organization? What if you could shape market perception, understand the buying process, respond to competitive threats, evaluate trends and issues, and improve the return on your marketing investment from product positioning, branding, PR, and marketing campaigns? What if you could help marketing to quickly determine whether their messages are gaining traction in the marketplace and which of those communication vehicles—including spokespeople—are most effective at delivering those messages?

Monday, March 29, 2010

Health Care Reform and Cloud Computing

Organizational chart of the health plan; click on image to enlarge it.
Last Thursday, March 25th, Congress approved a bill for major health care reform, which has been a priority for several administrations and a topic of discussion and controversy for decades. I compiled below a few articles, perspectives, and summaries of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (H.R. 3590):
While the business side of health care will change considerably as the new regulations take effect, I think it’s also interesting to take a quick look at current and future technology improvements in patient care, such as bionics and nanomedicine. Artificial limbs that can be controlled by thought are currently being developed and tested, while nanomedicine will create breakthroughs in treating many diseases at the cellular level.
In most business environments, business intelligence is high on the wish list to help control costs, improve performance, and identify business opportunities by discovering patterns and insights in data for improved decision-making. According to the below articles, business intelligence is also a high priority in health care:
Cloud-based business intelligence solutions can help health care companies achieve their goals of reducing cost, streamlining operations, and delivering better care through improved decision-making, because BI SaaS can be instantly activated and scaled to meet business requirements. Just as health care reform promises improved access to health care for more people, BI SaaS provides insights to more employees for better decision-making. But is health care ready for cloud computing? According to these two articles, the answer is “yes.”
If you are interested in reforming your business to drive revenue growth and profitability, improve business performance, gain insights from social media, and solve IT concerns in the cloud, consider these cloud-based solutions:

  • Enterprise mashup dashboards such as mashmatrix Dashboard provide rapid, personalized development of dashboards from any web-facing data source; get a complete view of all the information you need on one screen without having to switch between screens and applications.
  • SaaS business intelligence (BI) applications from Birst and eiVia provide quick reporting and predictive analytics for decision-making.
  • Enterprise relationship management solutions such as BranchIt help your business leverage relationships that colleagues may have with prospective customer or partner contacts.
  • Price optimization applications from companies such as Mimiran help you avoid leaving money on the table in pricing your products or services.
  • Enterprise brand management solutions from Attensity360 aggregate, measure, and analyze news media and consumer opinion from print and social-media sources to yield insights that enable sales, marketing, PR, and executives to better understand their customers, competitors, influencer communities, industry trends and issues, the press, and the investment community.
  • Enterprise cloud databases such as TrackVia help you quickly design and deploy cloud-based applications to solve business problems.
  • Integration products from Pervasive Software and Sesame Software provide data exchange and interoperability between legacy on-premises and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications.
  • Cloud-based single sign-on systems from companies such as TriCipher provide a secure, single login for a user to access all authorized cloud-based applications.

How do you plan to reform your organization to better serve your patients and customers with cloud-based solutions?

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Avatar, The Singularity, and Cloud Computing

In the film Avatar, I was especially interested in the ability to link to other beings or transfer ourselves from one body to another. If we believe inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil, author of The Singularity is Near, we will soon be able to do these transhuman activities ourselves. The Singularity is a theory that computer intelligence will surpass human intelligence, resulting in a highly accelerated rate of technological progress. In The Singularity is Near, Kurzweil writes about our future ability to digitize and upload our minds to new types of bodies, and even to live forever, since our minds would exist digitally outside of any specific body (and assuming you have several good backups). Here is a video in which he explains these concepts. A movie, The Singularity is Near, will be released this year. There is even a Singularity University, co-founded by Kurzweil and personal spaceflight pioneer Peter Diamandis, in partnership with Google, ePlanet Ventures, and Autodesk.
Imagine, rather than venturing to a rainforest for an Avatar-like vacation, just renting a body (a cyborg) there, and downloading yourself to it! You could also tap directly in to the experience of someone in a rainforest, with his or her permission. If your cyborg were harmed or destroyed, you would be backed up elsewhere and could resume from there.
If you’re concerned about any of the issues surrounding The Singularity, you have time: according to Kurzweil, The Singularity won’t occur until 2045, although mind uploading will be possible in the 2030s. If you’re really concerned about whether The Singularity is here yet or not, visit www.isthesingularityhereyet.com.
In addition to transhumanism, Avatar is about revolution. According to Bernard Golden, CEO of HyperStratus and a columnist for CIO magazine, cloud computing will cause three revolutions. He masterfully wrote an epic three-part article series describing each cloud revolution in detail:
  • Part One: Prologue and “Revolution #1: The Change in IT Operations.” Winners: Apps groups, Apps groups (2); Losers:  IT operations; Winners: IT operations
  • Part Two: “pay-as-you-go” pricing; opex vs. capex; control shift from IT to business units; low cost fosters experimentation; scaled cost encourages large-scale applications
  • Part Three: Epilogue; price elasticity means apps explode; apps explosion puts unprecedented pressure on IT infrastructure; app developer shortages, with emphasis on locating talent and leveraging service providers
Here is Golden’s conclusion: “I’m sure it’s easy to dismiss these three revolutionary developments of cloud computing as over-dramatic. However, as a species, we humans have very little temporal perspective. In 1995, who would have predicted the rise of a computing giant like Google? Computing at that time was underpowered PCs communicating to servers that looked like slightly beefy desktop computers upended onto their sides. Rack servers didn’t even exist. We don’t do a very good job of extrapolating current trends into the future, but it’s clear that cloud computing is a trend that will overturn the practices and assumptions used in IT today. It’s going to be a wild ride.”
Ocelot, Amazon Rainforest, Ecuador
I highly recommend reading Golden’s articles about the cloud-computing revolution, because they provide an excellent overview of the changes in computing that we are seeing now and will see over the next few years. Over time, cloud computing may partially pave the way to the transhuman activities we see in Avatar and to what will be the greatest revolution of all (if it occurs): The Singularity.
Avatar won Academy Awards for Best Visual Effects, Best Cinematography, and Best Art Direction. It was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Film Editing, Best Original Score, Best Sound Mixing, and Best Sound Editing. As we’ve probably all heard, it is the highest grossing film of all time. How long will that record last?
If you want to drive revenue growth and profitability, improve business performance, gain insights from social media, and solve IT concerns in the cloud in the here and now, consider these cloud stars that are best in their class:
  • Enterprise mashup dashboards such as mashmatrix Dashboard provide rapid, personalized development of dashboards from any web-facing data source; get a complete view of all the information you need on one screen without having to switch between screens and applications.
  • SaaS business intelligence (BI) applications from Birst and eiVia provide quick reporting and predictive analytics for decision-making.
  • Enterprise relationship management solutions such as BranchIt help your business leverage relationships that colleagues may have with prospective customer or partner contacts.
  • Price optimization applications from companies such as Mimiran help you avoid leaving money on the table in pricing your products or services.
  • Enterprise brand management solutions from Attensity360 aggregate, measure, and analyze news media and consumer opinion from print and social-media sources to yield insights that enable sales, marketing, PR, and executives to better understand their customers, competitors, influencer communities, industry trends and issues, the press, and the investment community.
  • Enterprise cloud databases such as TrackVia help you quickly design and deploy cloud-based applications to solve business problems.
  • Integration products from Pervasive Software and Sesame Software provide data exchange and interoperability between legacy on-premises and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications.
  • Cloud-based single sign-on systems from companies such as TriCipher provide a secure, single login for a user to access all authorized cloud-based applications.
What types of business results can you imagine with the leap in technology we’re now experiencing with cloud computing?

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Winter Olympics Advertising and Social Media Monitoring

How to Train Your Dragon

My favorite commercials from the Winter Olympics were for the film, How to Train Your Dragon, and for Jay Leno’s return to The Tonight Show. Watch the animated vignettes for How to Train Your Dragon, specially created for the Olympics and showing the “Viking origins” of several Winter Olympics events, here. Watch The Tonight Show commercial here.
I was impressed by DreamWorks’ effort to create humorous vignettes just for the Olympics, and I think The Tonight Show commercial was a quick, humorous way to promote Jay Leno’s return, playing on Jay Leno’s car collection.
Although I haven’t found advertising pricing information for the 2010 games, this news release from January 2010 indicates that the average price of a 30-second commercial for the 2006 Winter Olympics was $224,600. For at least that amount this year, advertisers must be keen to get as much feedback as possible on their impact. Nielsen Ratings showing the number of viewers of the Winter Olympics were great, but what about consumer sentiment?
Social media monitoring SaaS products such as Attensity360 provide a solution for evaluating the buzz about any topic, not just among journalists, but including any social media activity among the consumers that you are trying to reach. Social media monitoring also helps you directly interact with your audience. You can view their comments, answer questions, thank them for good feedback, resolve an issue, or survey and evaluate a dragon of negative feedback and decide if and how you want to respond.

Attensity360 dashboard showing topic track and awareness reports for How to Train Your Dragon
I created two dashboards in Attensity360 that monitor social-media activity for How to Train Your Dragon and The Tonight Show in the last 30 days. How to Train Your Dragon was mentioned 3,879 times in social media outlets. The topic track and other reports include comments in addition to original posts. Its high point before the Olympics was 93 mentions on one day; during the Olympics, its coverage steadily climbed, reaching a peak of 231 mentions on one day. Following the Olympics, coverage remained steadily over 100 mentions per day. Sentiment was 59.4 percent positive; 35.4 percent neutral; 2.7 percent negative; and 2.4 percent mixed. I can see all outlets where it was mentioned, the measure of sentiment for each outlet, the number of mentions per day, and I can even drill down to each individual mention.
Attensity360 dashboard showing The Tonight Show trend and sentiment reports
The Tonight Show was mentioned 19,596 times in social media outlets over the last 30 days. Coverage rose from a low point of 245 mentions on one day before the Olympics to 1,035 mentions on one day during the Olympics to 3,289 mentions on March 2, the day after Jay Leno returned to the show. Sentiment was 57.4 percent positive; 25.1 percent neutral; 11.7 percent negative; and 5.8 percent mixed. The top outlet was Digg, with 712 items. Here’s an article in The Hollywood Reporter that I found through the Attensity360 reports, when I dug down through the mentions that Attensity360 found on Digg. I could have found the same article from a web search, but Attensity360 adds tremendous value because it aggregates all mentions, including comments, and then analyzes awareness, trend, sentiment, velocity, top sources, top authors, and content distribution by type (blogs, discussion forums, and micro blogs).
Attensity360 shows that both How to Train Your Dragon and The Tonight Show are doing well in social media outlets. How to Train Your Dragon will likely receive many more mentions after it is released on March 26th, just like The Tonight Show did after Jay Leno’s return.
Wouldn’t it be great to have similar insights for your company, products, or executives?

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Olympics in the Cloud

U.S. Bobsled Team and Night Train
I spent the last two weeks watching the Winter Olympics every night. Probably like most people, I was impressed with the athletes’ skill and dedication, and the international character of the Olympics. Here are links to the Vancouver 2010 website and to NBC for results, videos, and athlete profiles.
Holcomb, Olsen, Mesler, Tomasevicz
You probably saw, read, and heard a lot about most of the medalists, but what about the three men behind driver Steven Holcomb on the U.S. gold medal bobsled team? I never saw them named or addressed when they stood behind Holcomb in the televised interviews. So, without further ado, I offer special congratulations to the other three men on the U.S. bobsled team: Justin Olsen, Steve Mesler, and Curt Tomasevicz. Congratulations to Steven, Justin, Steve, and Curt for winning the first four-man bobsled gold medal for the United States since 1948!
Geoff Bodine
The winning bobsled, Night Train, leads us to two more illustrious sports careers: NASCAR Driver Geoff Bodine and NFL football hall-of-famer Dick “Night Train” Lane. Bodine won the Daytona 500 in 1986 and he was honored as one of “NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers” during NASCAR’s 50th anniversary celebration. In 1992 Bodine founded the Bo-Dyn Bobsled Project with chassis and suspension design specialist Bob Cuneo, because he correctly believed they could build a better bobsled than the imports that American teams were using. Bodine and Cuneo had already collaborated for years on Bodine’s NASCAR vehicles. Here’s an excellent case study about the sled design. Bodine was extremely lucky to survive this truck racing crash on February 18, 2000 and then see his bobsled win at the Olympics 10 years later on February 27, 2010.
Dick "Night Train" Lane
I don’t know if Night Train the bobsled is named after Dick “Night Train” Lane, but he was the greatest defensive back in NFL history, according to this video. He still holds the record he set in 1952 for most interceptions in one season, although the way he tackled around the neck is dangerous and is now not allowed. I sort of crossed paths with both Night Trains; Dick “Night Train” Lane ultimately played for the Detroit Lions in my home state Michigan, and I was nicknamed “Night Train” after him. Night Train the bobsled was built in Connecticut, where I lived for two years.
You host a business and IT olympics every time you consider a new IT strategy, contract, or purchase. You need to collect and vet ideas to define an appropriate strategy, and then find and vet the best products, team, and vendors that can carry you to victory.
Consider these Cloud Olympic champions that will help you drive revenue growth and profitability, improve business performance, gain insights from social media, and solve IT concerns in the cloud:
  • Enterprise mashup dashboards such as mashmatrix Dashboard provide rapid, personalized development of dashboards from any web-facing data source; get a complete view of all the information you need on one screen without having to switch between screens and applications.
  • SaaS business intelligence (BI) applications from Birst and eiVia provide quick reporting and predictive analytics for decision-making.
  • Enterprise relationship management solutions such as BranchIt help your business leverage relationships that colleagues may have with prospective customer or partner contacts.
  • Price optimization applications from companies such as Mimiran help you avoid leaving money on the table in pricing your products or services.
  • Enterprise brand management solutions from Attensity360 aggregate, measure, and analyze news media and consumer opinion from print and social-media sources to yield insights that enable sales, marketing, PR, and executives to better understand their customers, competitors, influencer communities, industry trends and issues, the press, and the investment community.
  • Enterprise cloud databases such as TrackVia help you quickly design and deploy cloud-based applications to solve business problems.
  • Integration products from Pervasive Software and Sesame Software provide data exchange and interoperability between legacy on-premises and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications.
  • Cloud-based single sign-on systems from companies such as TriCipher provide a secure, single login for a user to access all authorized cloud-based applications.

What types of business and IT projects are you planning for success in your organization, and are you planning to use cloud-based solutions to speed you to your best performance?

Monday, March 1, 2010

Tonight Show SaaS

Jay Leno's first monologue back on The Tonight Show. NBC photo

I think it’s interesting to watch what happens when a company changes a familiar brand, such as when The Tonight Show switched hosts last year from Jay Leno to Conan O’Brien. Unfortunately or fortunately for both Leno and O’Brien, their new gigs did not deliver the audiences that NBC expected. O’Brien exited with $33 million (plus $12 million for his staff of almost 200) while Leno moves back to his old job beginning tonight. Even after five years of preparing the audience and the show for the change, it didn’t produce the expected results.
Technology brands usually don’t suffer as much from change, because technology is expected to change and it must change to continually improve. Can you provide an example similar to the reversal of The Tonight Show in tech? Steve Jobs returned to Apple with great results, but few tech products were modified with improved technology and then returned to their former version due to lower-than-expected sales.
We are now experiencing a shift in computing from on-premises systems to cloud-based systems that is much more significant and far-reaching than The Tonight Show example. Here are just a few recent articles pointing to the change, in addition to the thousands that have been written over the past few years confirming enterprise transition to cloud computing:
Lindsey Vonn with Jay Leno on The Tonight Show. NBC photo.
The timing was perfect to kick off Jay Leno’s return to The Tonight Showright after the Olympics, which were also broadcast on NBC. He is a comeback champion like guest Lindsey Vonn, downhill gold medalist and Olympic rock star.
According to this article on ChannelWeb, “CIOs See Big Cloud Computing Shifts in 2010,” the timing is perfect for cloud computing as well. The economy, budget cuts, and the rapid pace of change in business are fueling the need for affordable, flexible, and easy-to-deploy cloud-based information systems that move with your needs.
Kevin Eubanks
As your host of Todd Lane's Tonight Show, I’m proud to introduce these honored guests who will play in your environment and enhance your business just like Kevin Eubanks and The Tonight Show Band, or like the stellar performance by guitarist John McLaughlin in this video:

  • Enterprise mashup dashboards such as mashmatrix Dashboard provide rapid, personalized development of dashboards from any web-facing data source; get a complete view of all the information you need on one screen without having to switch between screens and applications.
  • SaaS business intelligence (BI) applications from Birst and eiVia provide quick reporting and predictive analytics for decision-making.
  • Enterprise relationship management solutions such as BranchIt help your business leverage relationships that colleagues may have with prospective customer or partner contacts.
  • Price optimization applications from companies such as Mimiran help you avoid leaving money on the table in pricing your products or services.
  • Enterprise brand management solutions from Attensity360 aggregate, measure, and analyze news media and consumer opinion from print and social-media sources to yield insights that enable sales, marketing, PR, and executives to better understand their customers, competitors, influencer communities, industry trends and issues, the press, and the investment community.
  • Enterprise cloud databases such as TrackVia help you quickly design and deploy cloud-based applications to solve business problems.
  • Integration products from Pervasive Software and Sesame Software provide data exchange and interoperability between legacy on-premises and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications.
  • Cloud-based single sign-on systems from companies such as TriCipher provide a secure, single login for a user to access all authorized cloud-based applications.
Another difference between The Tonight Show reshuffle and the transition to cloud-based systems is that we won’t turn back from the cloud. We’ll see which way it goes with The Tonight Show. Furthermore, if you want to implement the above cloud-based solutions, it won’t take five years of preparation and $45 million to exit if you decide to make a change.
As host of your business audience, what cloud-based solutions do you want to showcase to drive your approval ratings over the top?