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Bulk research tool for Google Trends


alkan

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Hello folks!

We are building an advanced Search interface for Google Trends with a bulk research functionality and think it might be of interest to sociologists:
 
TermChase lets you quickly find and analyze trending terms according to criteria such as Term, Topic, Country, First Mention Date and a "Trendiness" score calculated by the system. All the factors can be used on their own or in combination.
interface.png
 
- Score: is a value between -200 and 200 that measures the growth/decline of the search interest over the last 7 days for a specific term (it also takes into account some other factors). Terms with a score >30 have shown a clear growth in the last couple of days. When you set the score to 20 for example, you will only get terms with a score of 20 or more.
 
- Minimum topic relevance: the higher the value, the more closely will the resulting terms be related to the selected topic
 
- Minimum country interest: the higher the value, the more search queries (compared to the total number of queries) must originate from the selected country so that a term is shown
 
While the score is calculated by our platform based on the timeseries chart, topic relevance and country interest are provided by Google Trends.
 
TermChase improves on Google Trends's limited search capabilities and provides a convenient way of listing large number of terms together with their corresponding trend charts for the last 7 days and for all time history (2004-now). 
 
The following screenshot shows a number of trending recipes:
recipes.png
 
Another use case could be "What is" questions:
whatis.png
 
How does it work?
 
TermChase.com is currently a beta version and collecting 35'000 terms per day. However, we are planning to increase scraping speed to several 100'000 terms a day or more. Another planned feature is to show the absolute search volume for each term.
 
We hope that you'll like TermChase and would highly appreciate any kind of feedback. Do you find the tool useful for sociological research? Are there any additional features you'd like to see in the tool? Thank you for your contribution. Enjoy!
Edited by alkan
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