Monday, 11 November 2013

Social Web Mining Economics Data

I am interested in mining some web-data related to the rupee versus dollar rate ...

I would like to know what kind of information is out there ...

What are people saying about viability of the dollar ...

What are people saying about viability of the rupee ...

What about the international analysts ...

What are they saying about India's GDP growth rate ...

What are they saying about India's retail reforms ... and other reforms that the West is expecting from India ...

That is the kind of information I am looking forward to ...

I'd love to hear from anyone ... how to do all the above and of course ... there are more questions than those above ...

The Case: Application of Social Media Analysis

If you would like to go straight to the Case ... jump from here ... to the line after the next red line ...

We have been using GEPHI and other tools to visualize social networks ...

The first time that network diagram popped up and the ability to transform it into beautiful colors ...

Was possibly the greatest moment of joy in this course ...

One could see so much more for the first time ...

And then ... questions started popping up ... what does it mean?

More so, the discussion has now evolved to:  what is the use of all this for business?

So here's my 2 cents on the business objectives of social network mining, I am going to talk about a couple of scenarios, not all though -  due to paucity of time and space - but could put in more coverage later if time permits.

So, read at your own risk with a healthy dose of skepticism and questioning.

Case Building:  A mobile phone maker "TelTel" wishes to release information about its upcoming launch to the most "qualified" prospect and is advised by a Consulting company "Gyani Inc." to use Social Network Mining on Facebook.

Why?

Gyani Inc. 
Gyani Inc. is a world-class consulting organization that forayed into Social Media mining with the help of a number of partner forums over a period of time.  It also has a tie-up with a mobile user forum called "SolveMeraMobileProblem" (SMMP) on Facebook.

SMMP
All kinds of users of mobile phones of various brands visit the page of SMMP to seek advice regarding their mobile phone problems.  Most of them are able to find solutions within a week's time, thanks to the technical background of founders of SMMP, and a huge loyal techno-savvy inter-connected user base, that is more than eager to help.  Over three years, SMMP page has over a million hits every day, primarily through Facebook and also through Google searches - mobile users looking for a solution on Google get SMMP search results from Facebook and therefore land-up on Facebook page, often find solutions or pose questions, and in the process become signed-up users.  Signed-up users are drawn to the intrinsic features of Facebook and often network with each-other to collaborate for solutions, or for simply the fun of networking.  Over the course of time, a huge web of users has now become inter-connected through the SMMP page.  Of course SMMP charges a fee for quicker support and provides a platform to sponsors to sell branded merchandise.

WIIFM (What Is In It For Me - Everyone Asks)

For SMMP, the opening up its user base can render several benefits - including providing legal revenue generation opportunities.  It can also provide insights into the user base, how to meet their requirements, how to better competition and provide better satisfaction to users for loyalty, identification of thought leaders, identification of potential bottleneck areas, identification of products and services that may be able to monetize various networks within the user community and so on ...

For TelTel, SMMP offers an awesome dedicated pool of potential customers for various offerings:

-  Some of the SMMP users are known to purchase every new gadget launched ahead of others
-  Some of the SMMP users are known to be looking for alternatives to their existing phone products
-  Some of the SMMP users are known to be opinion leaders on other forums as well and can influence buyers of TelTel's products even outside SMMP / Facebook
-  Many of the SMMP users are experts in ripping apart any new product for its weaknesses and failures, they could potentially give advance warnings to TelTel about potential failure points
-  Many of SMMP users are "C" level executives and get influenced by opinions expressed by users on the SMMP forum, when it comes to corporate buying

Alright I got to pause here, to see if something got registered.

Is it now more obvious, why social network mining can make business sense?  Now in the above scenario, let me reverse question and ask - how can social network mining make business sense?

Post your responses below.

Social Network Analysis: Power Tools 4 u

Social Network Analysis: Which Tool Will You Choose?

Alright, this time I am going to reel off one liners (mostly) about a couple of prominent powerful tools worth evaluation.  These tools can be of use to varying audiences and one could even get creative.  Here we go, one by one:

Gephi- enables visualization and simple network metrics

NetLogo is for modelling networks - to visualize processes shaping networks and happenings on networks

iGraph is for more sophisticated and complex calculations

A great tool is Pajek (means: spider in Slovanian).  http://pajek.imfm.si/doku.php  (it is Windows only). Pajek is a rather very mature, excellent and extensive tool which is FREE and can be worked through drop-downs.  "Social Network Analysis with Pajek" - this book teaches a good deal of scenarios one can analyze with Pajek

UCINet is a Windows only extensive tool, that requires a licence which may cost a couple of hundred dollars, though is a mature product

NodeXL is in beta, a newcomer, and is free for the moment.  It is Windows only, integrates with Excel so Excel users may find it easy to work with

Those inclined towards programming can take advantage of NetworkX (Python based) .  It has been developed to process large networks.  Works on top of existing C and Fortran libraries, is open source

'sna' package for R has extensive, statistics-heavy functionality including the P-star model (to model networks as they evolve to test hypothesis what is driving edge formation)

Another package called SoNIA (Social Network Image Animator) is available from Stanford University that specializes in longitudinal analysis of networks, including the P-star model

So, tell me now, which of the above tools have you tried, and which one did you like the most - and if I may ask - why  (i.e. please answer in context of what you do in analytics) ?

Also, do send me the name of your favorite tool you'd like me to check-out, if you have one !

Sunday, 10 November 2013

SIXTY TWO Extended Tools for Social Media Analytics

Here is a list of SIXTY TWO tools that can help in social media analytics.  Some of them are FREE!


Tools differ from each other not just in terms of look and feel, but also in terms of functionality.  The choice of tool for your enterprise will depend on your objectives. Some of the tools below offer real-time, customizable dashboards while others permit sharing between multiple users, single click response-ability, while others are simple and lightweight. 


  1. Alterian/SDL ($) | Alterian is now SDL, an integrated platform that blends the marketing analytics, campaign management, and social media capabilities from Alterian with those of SDL.
  2. Argyle Social ($) | Identify and engage with more prospects, qualify and quantify better leads, and build and maintain stronger relationships by linking social media actions to the marketing platforms you’re already using.
  3. BackTweets (Free) | Track how many people are talking about you, who’s talking, and what they’re saying. You can search through a tweet archive for URLs sent via Twitter, including results for full URL links, shortened URLs, and URLs without the “www” prefix.
  4. BlitzMetrics ($) | Social media dashboards for your brand that monitor content across Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Tumblr, and more. It helps you benchmark against your competitors, learn which demographics are the most active, and track content performance so you can improve your reach and engagement.
  5. Bottlenose ($) | A tool that provides live social intelligence by analyzing activity across all the major social networks. Use it to search, monitor, analyze, target, and engage in real time, all from one place.
  6. Brandwatch ($) |This service reads through and summarizes what’s being said on the Web about brands, people, and products. Define keywords to track (brands, topics, people names, products) and get access to mentions,  trend and campaign analysis, and competitive info.
  7. Brand Monitor:  Track your brand across numerous social media sites. Find where conversations relevant to your business are taking place so that you can start becoming an active social media participant. Learn trending keywords and measure conversation engagement to help bring more valuable brand content to social media platforms.
  8. Buffer (Free and $) | An app that manages multiple Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn accounts, with the ability to set a tweeting or updating schedule unique to each. Includes detailed analytics for all your posts.
  9. Buzz Equity ($) | Listen to social media conversations in real time from various social media channels like Twitter, Facebook, blogs, news, forums, reviews, and video websites.
  10. CARMA ($) | Evaluate your overall social media image, brand recognition, message penetration, competitive positioning, and areas of strength and weakness, and use the data to develop a strategically sound and effective communication strategy.
  11. Collective Intellect ($) | This Oracle platform captures millions of conversations a day across multiple social networks, including Facebook and Twitter. It extracts sentiments, preferences, and intentions from those sources and displays the information in real time.
  12. Crimson Hexagon ($) | Tap into social media conversations with listening tools that help you understand how the most engaged consumers think and feel about your brand, why consumers are choosing other brands over yours, and how your ads/marketing are really perceived by your audience.
  13. Curalate ($) | This tool applies advanced image analytics to social media conversations to give you detailed insights for your initiatives on Instagram and Pinterest.
  14. CustomScoop ($) | Track media coverage, listen to social conversations, monitor your competition, measure PR and marketing effectiveness, and get automated daily reports.
  15. CyberAlert ($) | Monitor 100,000+ consumer-generated media sites for word of mouth, including Twitter, blogs, Usenet (there’s a blast from the past :), and video sites.
  16. Engag.io:  This is a great tool for managing your conversations on social networks. Engag.io provides you with valuable insights into the people you are talking to via social media and also gives you a place to track whether or not you’ve responded.
  17. Facebook Insights (Free) | Facebook’s built-in tool provides Facebook Page owners with metrics around their content. Helps you understand and analyze trends within user growth and demographics.
  18. Fliptop ($) | A customer intelligence platform that uses publicly available information, including social data, to score leads so you can prioritize your pipeline, better target your audience, and know more about your customers.
  19. FollowerWonk:  This Twitter analytics service, now owned by SEOMoz, allows you to understand and sort your followers. Learn when your influential followers are most active so that you can select the best times to engage your community and to ensure you’re reaching the right people at the right time.
    Google Alerts
     (Free) | Get email updates of the latest relevant Google results (Web, news, etc.) based on your queries.
  20. Gorkana ($) | This tool searches through and filters conversations to provides insights into the most relevant conversations about your brand. Offers audits and reports plus daily social media alerts.
  21. HootSuite (Free and $) | A social media management system that enables teams to collaboratively execute campaigns across multiple social networks from one dashboard. Includes audience identification tools, the ability to streamline workflow, and custom reports. I use HootSuite to manage my company’s Twitter account.
  22. HowSociable:  Measure your brand’s impact online with this tool that provides you with a magnitude score. The score analyzes your level of activity online so that you can determine whether you have enough of a presence.
  23. Icerocket (Free) | A free resource for brand monitoring, it taps the Web, blogs, Twitter, and Facebook, and delivers easy-to-read results in one page.
  24. Klout (Free) | A tool that finds the influencers in your audience so you can target and empower them to become advocates for your brand.
  25. Kred:  Similar to Klout, Kred mines social data to give you a Kred score. The score is a combination of your influence and your outreach activity. Kred measures how often you tweet or post, how people interact with you, and the growth of your audience. Kred gives you a detailed breakdown of your score so that you know exactly where you should improve and the areas in social that are working well for your company.
  26. MarketMeSuite ($) | A dashboard similar to Hootsuite and TweetDeck, it can be used to manage and market on multiple social profiles, schedule messages, use geotargeting, and more.
  27. MediaMiser ($) | Web app that collects and analyzes relevant content about your brand from social, traditional, and digital media. Spots trends in media coverage, including sentiment, share of voice, and top regions.
  28. MediaVantage ($) | Pulls traditional media coverage and social media mentions into a database that helps you monitor your reputation, align your teams and messaging, and measure results.
  29. Meltwater ($) | Combines social media monitoring and analytics with social engagement tools to help you create targeted marketing campaigns and build  brand relationships.
  30. Mention (Free to $) | An iPhone and Android app that lets you create alerts for your company, its keywords, your brand, and your competitors. Updates in real time.
  31. NetBase ($)| A social intelligence platform that enables you to monitor, understand, react, engage, and publish through both owned and earned channels.
  32. Netvibes (Free and $) | A platform that tracks clients, customers, competitors, and your reputation across media sources, analyzes live results with 3rd party reporting tools, and provides media monitoring dashboards for brand clients.
  33. NUVI ($) | Real-time display of conversations that weight influence and sentiment. You can instantly see the social media conversations taking place in your market and immediately engage your detractors and evangelists.
  34. PeerIndex:  Use this tool to determine your online authority and who your online brand advocates are. Learn which topics are best for you to focus on and who to connect with to spread the word. 
  35. Pinpuff (Free) | Similar to Klout but focusing only on the Pinterest, it measures the how people share images about your brand and the influence that results.
  36. PinReach ($) | Measures your Pinterest influence by giving you an overall score and easy-to-read charts and tables that show your most popular pins and boards.
  37. Pinterest Web Analytics (Free) | Pinterest’s built-in analytics gives site owners insights into how people are interacting with pins that originate from their websites. See my in-depth post:Use Pinterest Web Analytics to Jumpstart Your Social Media Marketing.
  38. Plugg.io (Free) | Manage and tweet from multiple accounts, get friend suggestions, and automate syndication via blogs and news sources.
  39. Shoutlet ($) | A community management and moderation platform for Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Foursquare, and YouTube. Includes integrated workflow tools and task assignments.
  40. Seesmic:  Manage all of your business’ social media accounts in one place with Seesmic. Quickly view and respond to social activity in real-time even from your mobile devices
  41. Social Marketing Cloud ($) | An automated solution that enables you to monitor and analyze blogs, forums, wikis, and microblogging sites to track real-time conversations about your brand.
  42. SocialBro :Manage and analyze your Twitter account with SocialBro. This tool gives you detailed information about your Twitter community so that you can interact with followers more efficiently and garner the best results.
  43. Social Mention (Free) | A real-time social media search and analysis platform that aggregates user-generated content from Twitter, Facebook, FriendFeed, YouTube, Digg, Google,  etc. into a single stream.
  44. SocialPointer:  This tool allows you to track and monitor social mentions and respond in real-time. Find potential customers, listen to what your competitors are saying, and get immediate feedback about your business.
  45. Social Response ($) | Formerly Cotweet. Build dynamic Facebook fan pages, respond in real time on Twitter and Facebook, and communicate 1-to-1 with your followers.
  46. Sprout Social ($) | Web app that monitors Twitter, Facebook Pages, LinkedIn, FourSquare, Gowalla, and other networks where consumers are engaging with businesses and brands.  Also offers contact management, competitive insight, lead generation, and analytics.
  47. SWIX Analytics ($) | This tool tracks 75 social media metrics in one dashboard, enabling you to measure your social media influence.
  48. Synthesio ($) | Platform that offers global, multilingual monitoring of your brand’s reputation, campaign management, influencer tracking, and competitive intelligence. Well-suited for large enterprises.
  49. Sysomos ($) | A real-time monitoring dashboard that collects relevant online conversations about your brand and provides insights with detailed metrics and graphics.
  50. SocialMention:  Track and measure who is talking about you, your company, your product, or any topic related to your industry. SocialMention pulls data from hundreds of social media services to give you the most accurate, real-time information.
  51. Talkwalker ($) | This reporting tool constantly scans the Web and social media to monitor your brand, reputation,  and competitors. It can also be used for campaign tracking, market research, and customer service.
  52. Topsy ($) | Monitors tweets, websites, blogs, and social networks, and analyzes/indexes/ranks content and trends.
  53. Trackur ($) | Quickly monitor your online reputation, measure social media trends, and analyze social media mentions for your company, brands, or clients.
  54. TweetBeep (Free and $) | This app is like Google Alerts for Twitter: Choose some keywords and receive daily search results via email.
  55. TweetDeck (Free) | Very similar to HootSuite, only without all the bells and whistles, this client enables you to tweet and track mentions, people, and keywords.
  56. TwentyFeet:  TwentyFeet aggregates your activity from various social media platforms so you can get the full picture of your online presence. Then, you can determine which of your activities are most valuable.
  57. Twitalyzer ($) | One-click access to Twitter metrics that analyze followers, mentions, retweets, and influencers and their locations. It can also be used to compare your Twitter account to those of your competitors.
  58. TweetReach:  Who is reading your tweets? How is it being shared? What is the measured impact of what you’re putting out there? TweetReach is a social analytics tool that helps you capture this valuable information.
  59. TwitterCounter:  TwitterCounter tracks Twitter users to give you statistics and usage information for your account. This service offers a very basic free package with graphical data, but you can pay a bit more for access to an account comparison feature, more updates, report exports, and more.
  60. UberVU ($) | Keeps track of all the major social media platforms in real time and delivers opportunities for audience engagement.
  61. Visible ($) | A social media analytics and engagement dashboard that enables you to monitor, analyze, and engage in social media conversations all in one place. It can also be integrated into your existing CRM system.
  62. Vocus ($) | Cloud marketing and analytics platform that looks at social, search, email, and PR, and delivers real-time marketing opportunities in the form of leads, prospects, social media conversations, curated content and inbound media inquiries.
How does one select the right tool for one's business?  Are all tools radically different?
Choose a tool based on your specific requirements and SM objectives.  These tools have considerable common functionality, however some of them have distinguishing features or augmented capabilities - which depending again on your companies SMO's, may or may not be useful for you.


Social Network Mining: Examples of Business Benefits & Objectives It Can Deliver

Application of Social Network Analysis: Case Study 

Let's take this page for example, i.e. https://www.facebook.com/USAiPhone5S.  This is the official page of iPhone5S, and will be the object of our "Social Network Analysis". 

First and foremost, it is important to define the objective for carrying out this Analysis:

To help take the “voice” of the potential and existing customers, i.e. users on the above Facebook page, into various parts of the organization, to enable organizations and their departments to be able to“hear” the voice of users in different ways, to help organization(s) understand the AIOs (attitude, interest and opinion) of various users towards iPhone5S as an aggregate and as various AIO clusters.  The study should also tell us what product features, attributes, news etc. certain users like and and how these users are connected to each other through various similarities.

Among other business insights, this would help with the following:

1>     Releasing pertinent information at Facebook which is likely to be of interest to the largest number of users so that they remain engaged through the web-site, i.e. to keep the user on the AIDAS path
2>    Understanding the geographic co-ordinates of various users and their interests, so that on-the-ground action can form a basis
3>    Gather information from users how they compare the product and its various attributes to competitor and their products – so that those inputs can provide evolutionary direction and insights
4>    Overall answer a huge number of strategy questions – including forecasting the fate of the product in terms of sales response that can be expected, to training needs of salespersons to address most expressed concerns and overall ability of the company to maintain sustained interest in its products and offerings  


Data Definition / Data Attributes of GDF file:

name VARCHAR, ->  field is ‘name’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
label VARCHAR, ->  field is ‘label’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
type VARCHAR, ->  field is ‘type’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
type_post VARCHAR, ->  field is ‘type_post’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
post_published VARCHAR, ->  field is ‘post_published’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
post_published_unix INT, ->  field is ‘post_published_unix’ and data is of the type INT (integer)
user_locale VARCHAR, ->  field is ‘user_locale’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
sex VARCHAR, ->  field is ‘sex’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
likes INT, ->  field is ‘likes’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
likes_count_fb INT, ->  field is ‘likes_count’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
comments_all INT, ->  field is ‘comments_all’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
comments_base INT, ->  field is ‘comments_base’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
comments_replies INT, ->  field is ‘comments_replies’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
comment_likes INT, ->  field is ‘comment_likes’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
shares INT, ->  field is ‘shares’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
engagement INT, ->  field is ‘engagement’ and data is of the type INT (integer data)
post_id VARCHAR, -> field is ‘post_id’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)
post_link VARCHAR -> field is ‘post_link’ and data is of the type VARCHAR (variable character data)

Key Findings:

·        The most recent photograph had so far been liked by 63 members.  The speed with which a a particular post gains popularity or liking on time-scale can determine nature of future business communication
·        Users are distributed geographically into clusters, as they come from different countries
·        Gephi enables visualization of users in  various terms, including geographical clusters
·        For example, 845 people liked the photograph of golden iphone in one post, 882 in another.  User level mining of such “liking” clusters may yield the unique number of users per geography that are interested in the golden iphone.  When data is aggregated and then divvied up based on these and other parameters, it can point to a certain possible e-demand, i.e.  these net savvy users may be served with (let’s say Apple’s) business communication which may provide links to these users from where to get more information and even from where to buy the product.  With this information, basically the company would have executed AIDAS model (awareness -> interest -> demand -> action -> sale)
·        Therefore, from business perspective it is not only sufficient to provide information but also to lead the customer through the AIDAS model through implementation of 7P’s (product, price, place, position, packaging, people, processes) so that awareness to sale cycle can be effected through e-and physical presence
·        People from various countries, geographies, gender, education background etc. are converging to like iphone golden cover
·        This shows that iPhone with golden cover has not only been widely accepted, but also has set an altogether new trend for gold colored devices
·        Users can also been viewed in terms clusters of likes for various attributes of the iPhone
·        It appears that more in some threads one gender is more interested than the other.  Such threads can be analyzed to understand gender sensitivities and preferences, e.g. for pink iphone etc. such inputs can then be used for new product design ( a more compact iphone for usually smaller hands of women, even lighter at times) or for offering mere cosmetic additions (like a pink cover) etc. 
·        While likes may be common, even then many of the comments relate to different business interest areas – for example some users are asking when will the product come to their country, others want to know the price, will the product be available unlocked, etc. etc..  This means further mining is necessary between likes and comments – to see how many likes and how many comments of the same or similar type are there, so that these can be sent to the relevant business department of Apple for being addressed in a proper way
·        Country level data can also tell us through comments some of the problems with iphone, for example a 5.0 inches iphone may be too big for the Japanese customer.  So the company may decide to acknowledge the Japanese comments/customers and design product accordingly
·        Pricing information from various customers and clusters would tell the company whether it has the right pricing policy for that country or customer group/cluster.  Apple may however still decide to keep premium pricing even though users in a cluster comment that it is too expensive – so as to keep its image 
·        Product usage and support related comments may again help design better product(battery running out too fast complaints would normally come from a region where electricity network is not that reliable yet or if there are not sufficient public charging options – that can lead Apple to devise partnerships with companies to provide private charging stations at public places) or give rise to new training needs, not only for salespersons but also for customers so that they know how to use the product properly.  Analysis of clusters can tell us that
·        Thus, Apple may also be able to identify need for new partnerships in areas where it does not have a competence, e.g. with companies that offer public phone charging points
·        Most recent posts (downloaded 10 recent posts data at around 10:40 AM on November 8, 2013) have posts and comments from as far as 6th of November.  The exact hour is also available.  This shows the echoing impact of latest posts – these seem to be echoing over 3 days.  This can be used by the marketing department of Apple to design messages so that they can reasonably echo via comments for sufficient time so that the marketing or any service or other message gets maximum exposure
·        The average life of a post can be determined for categories of messages which can again help in optimizing communication from Apple
·     Many of the comments are in languages other than English.  This has an implication for Apple and those interested in interpreting comments for business – that adds requirement of multi-lingual personnel in various departments because as already stated, comments are related to various topics and therefore to various departments – so many departments may need to have multi-lingual personnel or as an alternate strategy, a global multi-lingual desk may be operated by a company to translate all comments into English and then be distributed to within-Apple departments for their contemplation and further strategization, or a country-language-wise desk may be created (as an alternate strategy) based on how many people are interested from which part of the world.  So there can be various strategies and information will help uncover the right strategy
·        A detailed analysis can also reveal the distribution of language(s) over geography - for example to answer the question, in which state of the US more stores should have bi-lingual salespersons?
    Where should Apple have what kind of distribution?  Where should Apple have more stores or just be content with e-presence?  Take example of US versus India.  Since a lot of posts were in the past from the US, Apple opened more distribution centers there, but had more e-presence in India.  Now Apple has caught frenzy in India also, so Apple is now expanding distributor network here also.  Similar approach can help uncover other emerging markets

·        A number of people have liked various attributes of the iPhone and those attributes are showing various growing trends, indicating strong support for the iPhone on all those attributes


Alright - so much for now, more later.  If you have some thoughts, please feel free to send them in.  Eager to hear!

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Social Networking Analysis And Mining Terminology 101

Here are some Social Networking terms that I found interesting:

Connections

  • Homophily:  homo=similar, phily=affection for.  This is the extent to which actors (people, inviduals) form ties with similar versus dissimilar others.  Common measures of similarity are:  gender, race, language, age, occupation, education level, income level etc.
  • Multiplexity:  how are two entities related to each other.  multi= many, plexity = connected-ness.  For example, Raj and Suman working together and also being bachpan friends would entail a multiplexity of 2
  • Mutuality / Reciprocity:  this is easy.  If Peter is a friend of Jack's, does Jack also consider Peter a friend?  Is it one way - in which direction, or both ways?
  • Transitivity:  
  • Network Closure:  
  • Propinquity:
Distributions
  • Bridge:
  • Centrality:
    • Betweenness Centrality
    • Closeness Centrality
    • Eigenvector centrality
    • Alpha centrality
    • Degree centrality
  • Density:
  • Distance:
  • Structural hole:
  • Tie Strength:
Segmentation
  • Cliques:
  • Social Circles
  • Clustering Co-efficient
  • Cohesion