Quick definition
Sentiment score quantifies how people feel about your brand on social — usually the balance of positive versus negative mentions over a period.
Sentiment score condenses how social conversation feels about you into a number. Mentions are classified as positive, negative, or neutral — by language models in listening tools, or by humans at small scale — and the score is commonly computed as net sentiment: (positive − negative) ÷ total mentions, or as the positive share of opinionated mentions. There is no single standard formula, so a score only means something alongside its method.
Volume metrics count attention; sentiment grades it. A mention spike can be a product hit or a billing scandal, and share of voice alone cannot tell you which. Tracked continuously, sentiment works as an early-warning system — a sudden negative swing often precedes a support-ticket wave or a press cycle — and over the long run it tells you whether the conversation your content and your service generate is the one you want.
A month brings 500 brand mentions: 230 positive, 120 negative, 150 neutral. Net sentiment is (230 − 120) ÷ 500 × 100 = +22. The next month, mentions jump to 800 — but the score falls to +6, with negatives clustering around a pricing change. Volume up, approval down: a divergence that is invisible if you only count mentions, and exactly what the score exists to catch.
Social listening tools classify mentions at scale; without one, sample manually — a fixed window, the same networks, the same rules each month. Spot-check automated labels: sarcasm, slang, and mixed feelings (“love the product, hate the price”) routinely fool classifiers, so treat tool output as approximate rather than exact. And act on drivers, not the headline number — read the negative cluster, find the recurring theme, fix the thing it points at.
Where SocialKit fits
SocialKit doesn’t do sentiment analysis — that’s a job for dedicated listening tools — but its calendar and per-platform customization give you full control over the tone you publish, the half of brand sentiment you own outright.
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FAQ
Quick answers to the questions people ask most about this term.
SocialKit posts to all 11 platforms from one calendar and tracks how every post performs, so the numbers explain themselves. Try it free for 7 days.
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