Consuming Social Media with Search and Hootsuite

Posted in Business Information, News, Research Management, Social media, Twitter | Tagged , ,

One high volume and high maintenance information area is social media.  Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ all generate huge streams of information that have the potential for containing useful nuggets.  What do you do if you want to dig out these valuable pieces without participating in social media?

You will need to create an account but can immediately lock it against followers or friends. Try a Twitter account first because it has fewest potential missteps in securing your account.  One you have your Twitter account in hand, create another account at Hootsuite.com.  Hootsuite provides a different way of looking at activity on Twitter and other social networks.  More importantly, it has some nice features for monitoring content by keyword or Twitter username.  You can use Hootsuite to monitor content on LinkedIn, WordPress.com blogs, and Facebook, among others, but you need your own account for each of those services.

Once in Hootsuite, you have a number of options for managing your information.  It assumes you want to be social, so your Twitter feeds will automatically be displayed, even though they are empty.  You can delete each of these to clear your window, ready for having searches there instead.  You want to add a stream and the following screen will appear:

Adding a search stream in Hootsuite for Twitter messages with "premises liability" in them

Adding a search stream in Hootsuite for Twitter messages with "premises liability" in them

Hootsuite recently purchased Twapperkeeper (named with a nod towards Mead’s Trapper Keeper), a service that archived Twitter messages.  You can archive a stream based on a single keyword in Hootsuite now, or you can use the original three keyword search.  As you create each new stream, it will appear in the window.

The goal here is to rely on the search mechanism rather than the networking connections to capture information as it flows by.  Since networking requires you to make or receive connections from others, search allows you to monitor without interacting with others.  For example, if you were monitoring a particular company or topic, you can set up a search to focus on it without becoming a Facebook friend or Twitter follower of that company and explicitly showing your interest.

Once you have created a number of streams, you may find that they extend off the screen.  Hootsuite supports tabbed pages, so you can aggregate streams on a given topic (practice area specific, for example, or a corporation or industry) so that you can quickly see what is going on in any given stream without scrolling too far left or right.

Lurking on Twitter or Facebook in this way may seem rather anti-social networking but social media remains a challenge for legal professionals.  Using search to mine the information allows you to consume information that is being shared openly without having to worry about confidentiality, privacy, or disclosure of representation breaches.

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Searching Social Media with Topsy

Posted in Bookmarklet, Firefox, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, RSS, Safari, Search, Social media | Tagged , ,

Finding social media messages is a challenge.  This seems to be particularly true when sifting through the information overload that is Twitter, whose own search engine seems perpetually unable to return relevant results.  It was ameliorated by Google and other realtime search, which would let you reach back beyond the last week or two and see relevant messages in the past.  As each of these realtime search tools goes offline, however, it becomes harder to dig into Twitter’s past.

The New York Times’ Gadgetwise blog has a good suggestion in Topsy.  I mentioned Topsy briefly a few months ago but it is worth taking another look at this tool.  Even forgetting the fact that it is a much stronger search engine than Twitter’s own, it has some other features that make it a good draw.

Researchers will like its advanced search template.  You can specifically include or exclude words, and you can search for posts by a particular user or over a particular time frame.

One feature I like is that Topsy recognizes Twitter messages that link to other content.  If you are looking for messages that link to content posted on www.fictionaldomain.com, you can restrict the search to looking just at messages that link to that site.

Topsy also has an Experts search option.  If you are looking for an individual who is knowledgeable on a particular topic, you can search the experts section and it will return Twitter accounts that are frequently cited by other Twitter accounts for that topic.

It’s not exactly a citation index but it can give you some starting points if you are trying to identify expertise.  It is also not necessarily current.  The expert profiles are drawn from Twitter’s information, and you may want to visit a Twitter account profile to verify that the information is current.

Last but not least, Topsy supports RSS feeds for specific topics and experts.

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Strolling Down Your Social Memory Lane

Posted in Feed Management, RSS, Social media, Twitter | Tagged , ,
Memolane is a site that can help organize your research if you frequently share links or research snippets on Twitter or other social media sites.  I first heard about Memolane from the Advocate’s Studio but it took me awhile to look into it.

This is an aggregation tool.  You tell Memolane which of your social media accounts you want to include and it goes out and grabs the content from your accounts.  It can incorporate the obvious (Twitter, Facebook) and the less obvious (Vimeo, Foursquare) from the dozen or so services it supports. You approve of Memolane’s access to these accounts and it creates a visual display of the content.  Memolane will also incorporate RSS feeds.

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Realtime Search Diminished with Google’s Departure

Posted in Google, Search, Social media, Twitter | Tagged

Google has shuttered its Twitter-oriented search focused search, known as Google Realtime. The search was helpful because it retrieved more results than the default Twitter search, and included a timeline. You could quickly move through, and change, the results by focusing on a particular time. This was helpful for business intelligence (finding a Tweet sent out chronologically near to an event) as well as being a useful filter. Search Engine Land reports that Google’s contract with Twitter ended. You can still search Twitter messages by using Google Social Search but it’s not nearly as powerful and retrieves far more cluttered results. You can focus the search on Twitter (add site:twitter.com to your search) but it does not retrieve all possible matches. A search on Twitter.com itself also has some strange limitations. You can scroll through all of the posts of an individual to find a message. I was able to scroll back through my own messages today, but when I chose an early one (late 2009 was early for me), the search term wouldn’t retrieve the message. I suppose I will be returning to my other Twitter archive tools, like Visitmix’s Archivist, as a way to capture information for future use. Perhaps this is just a lull before we start to see some new, interesting ways of mining social information again.

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