posted on Dec, 29 2011 @ 12:06 PM
Hello everyone! For my first thread here on ATS I'd like to compare search trends from Google and Yahoo in regards to the 2012 candidates. In my
opinion these trends give great non-biased insights to candidate popularity, or at least our interest in the candidate. We're going to omit Obama from
these results simply because his name is used much more online. Also, we will only be looking at results from the U.S. (though worldwide results are
generally the same) from the past 12 months. Lets begin:
Google
Candidate
Names
Candidate Policies
Yahoo
Ron Vs. Mitt
Ron Vs. Rick
Rick Vs. Mitt
So what we consistently see in our searches is Ron Paul on top. If you go to the Google links you can see the break down by state, and you'll notice
on the map that the entire country is blue (for Paul). So without exception his name is being searched more throughout the entire country, and by a
significant margin (policy searches on Ron Paul were triple that of anyone else). I've actually been following this for a couple of months, in
November Rick Perry's top searches were "Rick Perry: oops!" and "Ron Paul humiliates rick perry".
Our Yahoo searches were made with a time span of three months, simply to make it a little more fair for Mitt. Yahoo shows us a breakdown of the user's
age by search term. In the categories above the age of 45 we see Mitt Romney does better.
Why do you think Ron Paul isn't as appealing to the older generations as it is the younger ones? Do you think the generation gap matters when it comes
to actual voter turnout, since the older generations vote more consistently? Obviously more young people use the internet, do you think that skews the
results?
edit on 29-12-2011 by badfish420 because: pictures won't show
edit on 29-12-2011 by badfish420 because:
mistake
edit on 29-12-2011 by badfish420 because: (no reason given)
edit on 29-12-2011 by badfish420 because: (no
reason given)