Nielsen Charts World Cup Perceptions from 7 Countries

June 18, 2010

As the World Cup got underway, Nielsen published an interesting blog post last week that shows what people are talking about online related to the sporting event in seven different countries: the United States, the United Kingdom, South Africa, Australia, Spain, Germany, and Italy.  You can take a look at the United States and United Kingdom charts below, and follow the link to read the full article (complete with all the charts) at the NielsenWire blog).

worldcup buzz united states Nielsen Charts World Cup Perceptions from 7 Countries

worldcup buzz uk Nielsen Charts World Cup Perceptions from 7 Countries

In the United States, two things stand out as particularly interesting from the Nielsen chart.  First, the U.S. team was not the most talked about team in the U.S., and second, the power of David Beckham continues in the U.S.  Even though he’s out of the World Cup due to an injury, people are still talking about him — a lot.

Otherwise, most conversations within each country are about the teams and players from those countries, which is not surprising.  However, it’s not the conversation topics that I found most interesting in this post from Nielsen, but rather, it was the way the charts clearly show segmented conversations based on geography.  That’s some cool data that businesses should be gathering and applying to their own brands.

Let’s face it — marketers always have to show visuals and hard numbers justifying the various initiatives they need to secure budget dollars for each year.  Wouldn’t a chart like these help executives who still don’t fully appreciate the value of online conversations about brands get a better perspective?  It’s just another tool you can put in your marketing toolbox to help build the case for social media marketing investment.

Charts like these prove that people are talking.  As marketers, our job is to find ways to leverage those conversations and keep them going.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
stumble this submit to reddit Add to Mixx add to del.icio.us add to Facebook

Send to a Friend





Send to a friend
Want more? Subscribe via RSS

This post was written by Susan Gunelius.

Susan Gunelius

Agree? Disagree?

Do let Susan Gunelius know what you think by commenting below ...

Comments

Got something to say?





Switch to our mobile site