RE-SOURCING NARRATIVE ANALYSIS

Narrative: mining "living wages"

About This Analysis

This analysis is based on the query: mining "living wages".

The language/market analysed is en/ALL.

What We've Done

We've analysed the open web to identify and characterise engagement around this topic.

How We Do It

Our measures correlate strongly with market choice and are strong predictors of future behaviour.

Why This Matters

This report provides you with a rapid, accurate view of the market, and key diagnostics which enable you to drive better market performance.

Narrative > Emotional Response

How Does The Market Feel?

Affect is a rich measure of the emotional tone of the significant content. Understanding of the emotional drivers empower you to better understand, and respond appropriately to, the emotional impact of the narrative.

In this chart, positive emotions are highlighted in green, whereas negative emotions are red.

If there is a clear tonality to the emotions expressed, such as expectation or apprehension, these are shown in purple.

The intensity of the colour indicates the intensity of each emotion.

The width of each arc reflects the degree to which the named emotion contributes to the overall emotional response.

Broad emotions, such as fear and love, are closer to the centre of the chart. The more subtle emotions, which contribute to those broad emotions, are shown in the concentric rings further out. Moving out from the centre, each ring shows a further level of detail.

Narrative > Topics & Themes > Relationships

What Are The Key Topics?
What Are Their Relationships?

This matrix shows the topics which are driving emotional engagement, and the tone of the associations between them.

RED indicates a negative association, GREEN a positive one. WHITE means a neutral connection, and BLUE, an association driven by anticipation and expectation.

This matrix gives you an 'at-a-glance' view of the overall complexity, engagement, and tone of the narrative. It also makes clear any cross-cutting concerns which lie at the centre of the narrative.

Narrative > Media > Power

Which Media Drives This Category?

This index ranks media voices according to their power to lead debate and shape perception, and drive market performance in terms of preference and desirability.

This is not a volumetric measure: often, the most popular media are not the ones with the strongest impact on topical or social engagement.

Outlook > Affect > Orientation

What's the Emotional Centre of the Narrative?

Affect Orientation is a measure of the degree to which the narrative stimulates an emotional response: active or passive, positive or negative. Most narratives are simply neutral, and do not provoke any emotional response.

Narratives such as this, which are driven by an active, negative engagement, will polarise opinion. Although they have the power to grow, to maximise long-term power, they must transform from destructive and oppositional, to positive and creative.

Narrative > Content > Exploration

What Does The Most Powerful Content Look Like?

Outlook > Engagement > Classification

What is the Nature of this Narrative?

Understanding of the structure of the narrative, offers orientation on the long-term value of engagement, and the manner in which to engage, to achieve Communication Power.

Characterised by intense debate, Tribal narratives - such as this one - are driven by personal experiences or commercial perspectives, bringing divergent POVs.

The vast majority of this debate, this flow, has no impact. Far less than one percent of content in such a narrative, will have any significance.

Although it is easy to be a participant, it is far more difficult to be a player or leader in such narratives.

How Efficient is Existing Content?

This narrative shows mass participation, but its content is poorly defined. Nobody is quite sure what the conversation is really about. Nor, does the majority of existing content successfully provide definition or focus. Whilst there's a lot of buzz, there is a lack of clear direction.

Narrative > Content > Power

Title Content Power Publication Date
National Dialogue on the Status of Contract Farming in ... 30.0 2017-10-16
104th Session of the International Labour Conference ... 20.0 2015-06-04
Taco Bell Calling Its New Menu ‘Power Protein’ for Good Reason 16.5 2013-06-25
Excerpts From Platform to Be Submitted to the Democratic ... 16.0 1976-06-18
All Comments 15.0 --
ILO Reiterates the Importance of Social Dialogue as a tool ... 14.0 2018-08-03
Launch of the Equal Pay Platform of Champions 14.0 2017-03-01
Major car paint suppliers join initiative against child ... 14.0 2017-02-24
Tripartite constituents - International Labour Organization 13.0 --
AFML: Opening address at the 12th ASEAN Forum on Migrant ... 12.0 2019-09-03
ILO Centenary: International Labour Conference 2019 ... 10.0 2019-06-21
Following international child labour conference in the ... 10.0 2020-03-06
Writer Tamar Adler’s Grub Street Diet 9.0 2018-01-19
20-21 September 2017: The Future of Work We Want: Workers ... 8.0 2017-09-18
Olympic medal pollution protesters disrupt Rio Tinto ... 8.0 2012-04-19
Call to Action for Decent Work, Decent Life 8.0 2007-08-13
Human Rights Day: A fair wage: A human right 7.0 2013-12-09
International Solidarity Meeting with the People and ... 6.0 2018-05-31
Stakeholder engagement: a practical guide | Leadership ... 4.0 2013-04-10
UN Forum on Business and Human Rights 2019: Fundamental ... 4.0 2019-11-27
Chapter 6: How to enforce minimum wages: 6.10 Global ... 4.0 2015-12-03
Trade Union Movement: COVID-19 and Workers’Organizations ... 4.0 2020-05-04
Rethink | Microsite | guardian.co.uk 4.0 --
Income inequality: Collective bargaining essential to ... 2.0 2013-12-17

What Content Drives The Narrative?

Content Power is a measure of the power of individual pieces of content.

This measure is independent of the number of people seeing or sharing this content (it is not volumetric). It is a true measure of content's intrinsic power.

The content shown here has been selected for its ability to drive market performance against preference and desirability.