GMail’s outage yesterday attracted a lot of attention, particularly from people who really rely on the e-mail service for their business and personal lives.
To get a better handle on how people reacted to GMail being unavaiable, we used MAP to focus on the sentiment before and after the outage.
On Monday (August 31), the social media conversations about GMail within 83% positive (44% positive and 39% neutral), while only 17% were negative.

Not surprisingly, GMail’s reputation has taken a major hit today (Sept. 2) as only 71% of total social media activity was positive (35% positive and 36% neutral), while negative conversations soared to 29% from 17%.

What’s particularly interesting is there are significantly more negative conversations happening within the U.K. (33%), compared with the U.S. (20%).
We also looked at the most common keywords within social media conversations. At the core was “outage” with strong links to “Google” and “IMAP” - Internet Message Access Protocol that lets you download messages from GMail’s servers to your computer to access e-mail.

Tags: e-mail, gmail, google, outage, sentiment, Social Media, sysomos



very cool demonstration of your product’s value here – well done.
35% were still positive? How do you explain that? Makes me question the analysis
If I put gmail up against my corporate email host, there is no comparison. This hit is a minor bump in the ongoing awesomeness Google Gmail provides for uptime.
@Marshall We use Google Apps for everything we do, and while the outage did annoy us, GMail still remains more stable than most “hosted” email systems.