From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
JamiQ
Singaporean company
Singaporean company
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | JamiQ |
| logo | JamiQ's Logo.png |
| logo_size | 218px |
| type | social media software |
| foundation | 2008 |
| founder | Kelvin Quee, Lee Jia Yi, Benjamin Koe |
| location_city | Singapore |
| location_country | Singapore |
| services | Social media analytics, social media monitoring |
| homepage | [http://jamiq.com/](https://web.archive.org/web/20180912050352/http://jamiq.com/) |
JamiQ Private Limited is a Singapore-based social media monitoring company. The company was founded by Kelvin Quee, Lee Jia Yi, and Benjamin Koe in September 2008, initially incubated with NTU Ventures. JamiQ's software uses algorithms that can understand the opinions and feelings inferred from phrases and sentences. It processes English words and denotes a positive or negative value to them. JamiQ's software also uses search engines, APIs, RSS feeds, and web crawlers to monitor social media in real-time. It specializes in monitoring Asian social media.
Products
JamiQ offers a variety of products.
JamiQ Social Media Monitoring
JamiQ's flagship product is its automated and localised social media monitoring and measurement solution that provides coverage of social media in any language. Data mining methods and natural language processing technology are used to produce real-time buzz trending, sentiment detection, influence scoring, and market segmentation. Unlike other similar services based in the US that do not cover local markets in local languages, JamiQ offers reach and coverage of all languages and markets and does so in every language for Asia and other multilingual/segmented market regions. Algorithms developed by JamiQ can determine the location of a blog/site even if it is not hosted locally.
ReputationWatch
ReputationWatch is a reputation management service for small and medium-sized businesses and it is a collaboration between JamiQ and Singapore telecommunications company, Singapore Telecommunications (SingTel). Email alerts about local and relevant conversations on new sites and social media platforms such as blogs, forums, social networks and microblogs worldwide are sent to users.
It is built on JamiQ’s social media monitoring technology to allow businesses to track real-time online conversations about their brands in their local market and it is only available on SingTel’s myBusiness Cloud Computing portal in Singapore.
Notable Implementations
Singapore General Elections Tracker 2011
Data visualisation company, Swarm, collaborated with JamiQ to launch the Singapore General Elections 2011 Tracker. The visualisation chart displayed top mentioned keywords and trending topics discussed online, along with the most shared articles circulated on the web. The tracker aggregates news articles and blog posts from Google and Twitter data.
References
References
- Chng, Grace. (Aug 2011). "A bubbling cauldron of Start-Up 2.0 firms". [[The Straits Times]].
- Chhan, Marcus. (28 January 2009). "The Curious Case Of Benjamin Koe". [[Marketing Interactive]].
- Hedirman, Supian. (Jan 2009). "Starting up, come rain or shine". [[Today (Singapore newspaper).
- La Marca, Daniela. (Feb 2011). "JamiQ Monitors Social Media across Asian Languages and Markets". [[MediaBUZZ]].
- Bhattacharya, Anol. (13 September 2010). "Cashing in on social media". [[Business Times (Singapore).
- Goh, Daniel. (18 November 2009). "JamiQ – Monitoring Social Media Across Languages". [[Young Upstarts]].
- Leong, Bernard. (19 November 2009). "In Conversation with Benjamin Koe, Co-Founder of JamiQ". [[SGEntrepreneurs]].
- Kwang, Kevin. (3 September 2010). "SingTel brings social media monitoring tool to SMBs". [[ZDNet Asia]].
- Robeiro, Joe. (21 September 2010). "Guarding online brand reputation with JamiQ". [[Enterprise Innovation]].
- Tham, Irene. (5 September 2010). "Online grouses do get heard". [[The Sunday Times]].
- Tan, Gwendolyn Regina. (6 May 2011). "Startups Capitalize On Singapore General Elections 2011". [[SG Entrepreneurs]].
- Lau, Adaline. (5 May 2010). "Social Media Monitors Measure Singapore Election Buzz". ClickZ.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about JamiQ — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report