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Lesson from "American Idol" Upset: Don't Put Too Much Stock in Google, Twitter

By Catharine P. Taylor | May 21, 2009

I’ve been spending part of the day obsessing about how Google, and Twitter, got the “American Idol” pick wrong, seeming to select, as of yesterday, the rather goth Adam Lambert over the fresh-faced Kris Allen. Given how social media and search are combining to create the National Focus Group, how could both of them be so wrong? Can the two of them be trusted to tell those in the media business, and other businesses, what the public wants? Should the people at NBC even care that the the Twit-ition to save “My Name Is Earl” (#saveearl) is currently the no. 1 trending topic on Twitter?

The answer on the Google question, according to 360i, the agency which published data yesterday on Mashable predicting Lambert would win, comes down to several factors:

  1. Scandal. Apparently, photos of Lambert surfaced at some point in the last few months showing him cross-dressing and being friendly with other men, which may have caused his search traffic to spike. People who had no intention of voting for him, may, nonetheless, have wanted to go tabloid in their Google searches.
  2. The difference between a vote and a search. 360i points out that searches are not votes, and shouldn’t be viewed as such, especially when, as the agency’s post says, a “13-year old girl can vote an unlimited number of times.”

Interestingly, however, 360i points out that aside from Google, “votes” in social media are, in a sense, still picking Lambert to win even though the competition is over. As of this morning, he still had more than twice as many Facebook fans, and his first single is currently outselling Allen’s on iTunes (though as this chart notes, three of Allen’s songs are in the top 10, and a single from Fox’s new show, “Glee,” is outselling both).

All of which is to say, it’s a bit too easy to get enamored with Internet data, and social media, partly because we didn’t have such a visible, rich data mine before. As David Berkowitz, head of emerging media at 360i told me: “With any of this, there’s a degree of reading too much into this.” While I’m sure the people at NBC are watching the attempt to save “Earl” unfold on Twitter, they should keep that salt shaker handy — they may need several grains of the white stuff.  As much as Google got the “American Idol” pick wrong, there is even less known about how to project what goes on on Twitter out to the broader marketplace; it could be a bunch of “Earl” fans talking amongst themselves.  Sometimes, Berkowitz, says, “All the buzz in the world is only going to do so much.”

(UPDATE: The real-time search company OneRiot apparently predicted the “American Idol” winner correctly, using, as its metric, not volume but what people were saying about each contender. According to Mediapost, it sent a release out on Wednesday predicting Allen as the winner.

Catharine P. Taylor has been covering digital media and advertising for almost 15 years and is a frequent speaker at conferences about media and advertising. She posts daily to BNET Media, writes the weekly Social Media Insider column for Mediapost and also has her own advertising blog, Adverganza.com. Follow her on Twitter or subscribe to the BNET Media Twitter feed.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • American Idol Searches Predict Lambert Landslide

    comScore - 186 days 21 hours 31 minutes ago

    If Americans search behavior is any indication which way theyre leaning towards voting for the next American Idol, it looks like itll be a runaway victory for Adam Lambert. Compared to other contestants Kris Allen and Danny Gokey, Lambert generated a whopping 78% of all searches for the three finalists during the week ending...

  • American Idol and crowdsourcing: Can 100 million votes come up with the wrong winner?

    VentureBeat - 185 days 8 hours 17 minutes ago

    American Idol came to a conclusion tonight with an upset result. Clearly the voting system doesn’t work (indeed, how can I possibly have voted wrong!), and technology should provide a solution. (Spoiler alert) Adam Lambert, the screaming rocker whose voice range had no limit, went down in defeat to the folksy but cute Kris Allen. In my house,...

  • Appiphilia: Forget Adam Lambert and Kris Allen. You're the next American Idol

    LA Times - 185 days 16 hours 33 minutes ago

    Behind the scenes of "American Idol" during Season 2 in 2003. Credit: David Strick / For The Times Soon, the seats in Idoldome will empty. The elaborate set will be dismantled. And the haunting strains of the singers and synthesizer that begin "American Idol" will become a mere echo.  What's a couch-bound Idol addict to do until January?...

  • Kris Allen Beats Adam Lambert For 'Idol' Crown

    National Public Radio - 185 days 5 hours ago

    by Neda Ulaby Morning Edition, May 21, 2009 · Kris Allen won America's biggest popularity contest Wednesday night. A record 100 million votes were cast for the winner of this year's American Idol. And the outcome? An absolute upset. Kris Allen, 23, is a sweetly sincere former missionary from Arkansas. He was competing against flamboyantly...

  • Did AT&T Help Kris Allen Win American Idol?

    WebProNews - 178 days 22 hours 2 minutes ago

    One week ago today Kris Allen was unexpectedly crowned the winner of American Idol season 8. But how could this be? Wasn't the shows runner-up, Adam Lambert, a lock to win?With over 100 million votes cast Allen was announed as the winner... but just how many of those votes were assisted by AT&T employees? Do you feel the American Idol results...

 
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  •  
    1

    realmusicnut

    05/21/09 | Report as spam

    Simple explanation - flawed voting system

    AI voting system is flawed. There were 25million viewers of
    AI who casted 100million votes. That is 4 votes for every
    viewer. Not everyone who watched is voting and there are
    many people voting over 1,000 votes because it doesn't cost
    anything to vote. More accurate measure of real world
    marketability of the contestant is putting your wallet over
    your texting and calling fingers like iTunes download where
    majority of revenue and songs downloaded were Adams followed in distant second by Kris. Let's see how many Americans are actually willing to purchase a CD or download songs, or go to concerts for Kris over Adam that'll actually cost money. This sad but true situation is evidenced by past AI winners such as Taylor Hicks(the promoter had to give away tickets to his musical Grease), Fantasia Marino, and Rubin Studdard.

    AT & T CONFIRMED FROM THEIR DATA THAT 38 MILLION VOTES CAME FROM ARKANSAS. THE POPULATION OF ARKANSAS IS ABOUT 2.3 MILLION. WE KNEW THAT THEY WERE USING GIZMO AND DIAL IDOL TECHNOLOGY. One Arkansas church group of 152 people said they got in over 400,000 votes using the software and their texts. This is not American Idol as voted by millions, this
    is a few hundred thousand people trained in one state
    skewing the results (plus the Gokey fans). NOT A
    TALENT/SINGING CONTEST, THIS IS A REGIONAL VOTING AND
    TECHNOLOGY CONTEST. Kris admitted "Adam deserved this" He knew about the voting and technology training in Arkansas. He did not want to win that way.

    There are validity to internet chatters, google searches and actual iTunes download as these are more accurate measure of real world winner not AI votes. Adam Lambert is the true winner and already a MEGA STAR like no previous contestants have ever achieved.

  •  
    2

    percychow

    05/21/09 | Report as spam

    happy I think there's some points being missed...

    AI is a complete vertical marketing model from top to bottom...

    1. introduce the players (product) - selected from the populace
    2. narrow them down with simple filters
    3. hook the leftover populace with drama around the product
    4. involve the populace in "voting" for their favorite product
    5. establish loyalty to the product
    6. launch the product with fanfare
    7. sell product to same group of loyalists

    25 million people voted. That's 25 million active consumers. Of that 25 million, (at worst) only 1% will buy a product... that's at least 250,000 CDs or iTunes downloads or stickers, etc.

    Althought I theorize AI's conversion from votes to sales is probably closer to 10%+. But given the contest was closer...
    The conversion is going to be higher because the Adam fans feel slighted enough to BUY something...

    Just a theory of course.



  •  
    3

    sdoefms

    05/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Lesson from

    realmusicnut-would you please check your facts before you comment. No promoter has ever had to give away Grease tickets. On the contrary, according to broadway media in New York, Hicks was credited with adding 150,000 a week in revenue to the show. The house is packed and the crowd erupts for Hicks at each show. You are mixing up your story with a gossip rag story that talked about a common practice of giving away a few concert tickets. Nothing to do with Grease and that story was inaccurate also.
    Its unimportant but false stories are tiresome.

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