It's the difference between just mouthing off and putting your money where your mouth is.
Leading up to Sunday night's 87th Annual Academy Awards, Facebook and Twitter -- along with third-party social analysis researchers Adobe, Hootsuite and Way to Blue -- issued predictions of Oscar winners based on digital buzz.
The results? Out of their 29 predictions for the six major categories (Twitter didn't have a pick for best director), the forecasts got only 13 correct.
By contrast, betting sites, based on their pre-Oscars odds, were far more reliable. PredictWise, which aggregates info from U.K.-based Betfair, Hollywood Stock Exchange and other "prediction markets," correctly predicted 20 of 24 total Oscars winners, including for the major categories. For example, PredictWise as of Sunday at 1 p.m. ET gave "Birdman" a certainty rating of winning best picture of 67% and assigned "Birdman" helmer Alejandro G. Inarritu a 57% edge over "Boyhood's" Richard Linklater at 43% for best director.
Among the social researchers, only Adobe and Way to Blue predicted "Birdman" would win best picture, while none had forecast Inarritu taking home the best director statue for the film. The only category they all got right was Julianne Moore's best actress win for "Still Alice" -- evidently the safest bet of the night.
Why does this matter? After all, Facebook, Twitter and the others offered disclaimers of one kind or another noting that they couldn't really predict the outcomes with certainty.
The Oscars exercise underscores an important point: The wisdom of crowds is only as good as the crowd you're listening to. It's worth noting that Way to Blue, a British PR and consulting firm, got five out of six right; it used a relatively small selection of comments (less than 100,000) culled from Twitter, blog and news sites. Some social-media hypesters would have you believe that Internet chatter, analyzed in aggregate, can produce all kinds of interesting and actionable insights for content owners and marketers alike. But there's an old computer-science maxim that applies here: garbage in, garbage out.
Here's what social companies and third-party analytics firms had predicted prior to Sunday's Oscars, with the correct picks designated in bold.
Facebook
Best Picture - "American Sniper"
Best Actor - Bradley Cooper
Best Actress - Julianne Moore
Best Supporting Actor - J.K. Simmons
Best Supporting Actress - Meryl Streep
Best Director - Richard Linklater
Twitter
Best Picture - "Selma"
Best Actor Benedict Cumberbatch
Best Actress - Julianne Moore
Best Supporting Actor - Mark Ruffalo
Best Supporting Actress - Meryl Streep
Best Director - N.A.
Adobe*
Best Picture - "Birdman"
Best Actor - Bradley Cooper
Best Actress - Julianne Moore
Best Supporting Actor - J.K. Simmons
Best Supporting Actress - Meryl Streep
Best Director - Wes Anderson
Hootsuite**
Best Picture - "The Theory of Everything"
Best Actor - Eddie Redmayne
Best Actress - Julianne Moore
Best Supporting Actor - Mark Ruffalo
Best Supporting Actress - Laura Dern
Best Director - Wes Anderson
Way to Blue***
Best Picture - "Birdman"
Best Actor - Eddie Redmayne
Best Actress - Julianne Moore
Best Supporting Actor - J.K. Simmons
Best Supporting Actress - Patricia Arquette
Best Director Richard Linklater
* Based on 3 million social mentions across Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube and others from Jan. 15-Feb. 16.
** Based on data from more than 20 social-media platforms including Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Google+.
*** Based on data from Toronto-based Sysomos for comments Twitter, news, blogs and forums from Feb. 12-18.
© 2015 Variety Media, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media; Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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